5,4 V - rgv nzn E 5- ' ' ' 99 : o iff 5 4, 4 MASSACQ' SIMMGNS COLLEGE . LIBRARY The Gift of Class of 1953 SLMMON :fu 1 19 AMAS5 Ex Lnbras og S c o V N s 44 of N, f.- f f rg . ' ' , L! 9 'K -fx-f f 0 . R X , 'x X 1-if xx. K 5 I rovm:-an lr' 8 9 00 49 19, 'T' 694 QN AG?-1 lv! IM L '.1 rs' H . I. fri? 'Mt '1w'L' l 'R ' v v f'f1.31' ff i px- ' w A -1 , , A 9 L' . 5, ,4- ,' ' . C I, Q: 1 ' ., 5 'i f ,I U all - 1 -,f ' F' Pl.. - ,sI.'l',. f ' n Y IIA! Iv , .dnl . 1:21 .1 . 4:1 ll.. , I, s- 1 A kin ll af . ,Q A 1, 44 X f if ,. Y , . H' -'Ju ' 1 ' I 1 fy' -1 , ' ' ' fi ,l -14 5 ,-rg -as-, A . 'K -, .A:,s,,. 4 , . . . '- J ., , .J A '1 .M .ary . 1 - M L., ' N f. . 4 '.4'5l1'l.A,.'.!x.5'v., . .,:,-, 'A , 1e: LM , , 1' V1 , ' x f . l , fl , 9 1 . 'I ,X .- n A 1 ..x...!, L . l ' ' ' , v . gl., ,npr ' l.4 r , ' N , . H xx. i, yy .3.Q, ,- rm X xo ' , rw' - I I 'AY'v I-, H ...- x,,,, 1 V, ,r ff-I ,. .n. ,N .W 1 1 rv. I v A 'I -W . r 'nl f. 'fix v , ' K' . ,lx v U,. X 2 ' 'f , -lvl , -- ,LH ' , .5 ' P Ol ,.:0.!.i - . .mu if va, . , 14 115' zggyqx , WT-Q71 .vw vl, m the IQ53 MICRCCCSM V I 1, Q ,. 1 ., '.l , -v If .',-. .,f- ' fu Q! .3 I S' OV., f ,fl 21, 31, Yu . x lt- li. , ..-fax, 'F' - ' 1 V A A ' , -. ,. ?Tf,xQ,,?f4,,1f 1.44 A - ',Q,,3yf':-pi' 4 M, ,, - ,. J ,-1 'R '--fffv fx, --1 - -- -- 1 ,, W 7-' ff -'ff-f31 ! L' ik. '. Qfffzaof - 'g - 1 .77 : '?3l'1'4if7- ' yi?-4-fY1 -4 ' 4.. .w-.1 . 4-'2'6g., Vi' , '21,-F W ., , --P - 4 '-,nf in-'A' ..-' av . ' 1 '- I lf 3-r.f Y Ig. -Bef. , 1:34, A , 1 ' .fl . hh, iam, gf 15 ' IW 17,1 ., 'Q t,:L.4gZ?-if, K- , ,.,!Zf,w, .5 .5 ,wx z xxx. I ,Q ru l Z 'I f .Y U,-AJi,.,. 5 2,7 ..f ,.- . , higiv V, -- ,bg ,Tl ,,,,v Q ,A .:, A I n -fs, xxf. 'Q gc5'31l?? , t1'2'f,'l', ' ,-:fptf-50 -Q , ev had , lf'-far., -4, 5 1 55. '- -. -' f, 51: '. ' rg -,-,..,-- J, .-g,4,5'- '. -.-. ' 2 , 9.,,.'-, , 'I ' . Q 3 ,-', 3avi ' 1 - 'Z' --' 11 'Q-,if .Lffs ,-.'f'h' ff 'bf' f 5 .-H'--Y ml - g . p if v 4 f . . -' 61' , 'N ' 5 , 1- 4- Ii.g' ',u,5A-,'5- , ' 1'P-,1 K wx? 12' i.5n!?gv '! ' ' '?'l Fgfzrgfwwf 'K - wif 'FW ' 5 Aa, Y 4 ' 5 if ni-T X'-'Twl' 2. 'Wa' 7' - 5. N 1 -' --n fv+' r ' LA-, - ' ffl' , ., sf, I -I 4- ,-,K 4 1 V an-. A. fl .. gl Q 31- ,. fx H -U -1 - A - ,.f A. .mn LJ s- 'I' -- .--V ,, , , w ff -f 4 4. ,F - H. ,145-, . f ,f,-,- -1,- '5 F' -.' W5 .k5..4f-r 51.1 Q. wif i '.r ' I . , N . 'G' -' , 4 - I ' . ' , Ili f-FHM f +f3iil'a34'i?? s- 1 ' 4' - ' f ' ' , Y'-.1 f ff' ag. 1 A C.. ' -fSa5'f'F . . w -, 'U 4 I . , . ix. , , . If , , ,gm V J 'Qv ., V' ' , 'Six 'f if 2-4 .'5fl2:-M,-jf?-7' ' 'l-- ' Q ' 5 -A' , '.-. 'Y-. , f , E.-1, w - . , ,f ' f -4,i?'71f : f ff ' m x: fl ' ,H JJ , , ,. f ' -.1 I 'Q ' ' ' , -ag, f-rpg fl 7 QJW . W , 'S,,'H, ,:h' L,gf,,1'-2 - A .1 ,.: an b -, , 1 aff , if Q: Q' H I ' ! h ,Y2Pw 't:1C' 4-v ' ' .Q -1-1,tf- 95h-QM '19 YW -1f ,f . ' - fx .Lf --,? , fs ,ga 2-wr? -' Je,- S ,,x '??f ' Ef f' M': 'fJ ,. - 53 . ' I3 All-Q , ,. . V' 1 Y. 'Vh?1sl -- - '- - if . , .f,-. , 1 3-, 4 ,. v-vi' :f ar ' - ' ?' 'I -J-ef W - 0' ., -.. .ky ,, wg. fy 4 .Y J ,V si -'uf Ng ..- .14 M, y U. -4. V N. ,.,,.,: ,A , N 'N . ff U' P- , .1-I X - , ' is -kj, ' ,'., ., - -,wr , .1-.2-14.4 'Minh nw- 'V ' - - ' Q fa f W , -wif qw vu- X, , 4 1 ,js fag 'N , , ,, K :W U , A -4 - ,QW gt. 5, V - .4 gk. 'J is as - f :Q W 'M' , , M in , ,, ' PQ k In - P7 ,.V,f 'NL r' 1-J ' ' W ---' W , -fm f ' -f, Q, Z. ---- f -.W ,' -f 'fn Wi, 5--, X, ,L ,xgr QW, ., ., 'Sk DEDICATED To Harrison L. Harley MMONS COLLEGE LIBRARY T is to Dr. Harrison L. Harley, for thirty years a member of the faculty serving as Professor of Philosophy and Psychologyg Chairman of the Division of Philosophy, Psychology, and Educationg and now retiring Director of the School of Preprofessional Studies that we ajfectionately dedicate this issue of MICROCOSM. Dr. Harley pauses with a smile in the midst of a busy day. 1 Unwinding fhe Years in Review . . . 'A FQ , f f K K i ff' x ' Xa. f 'Z V, f . 5 !'f,4 ff fr X f2Q?72!, Wf A j , f fy D cj lf ,,vK l J W ox. C X 49 Q X +069 - ' f A M5 1... '2 ' 41 , 1 f 1' 6021 Z! ' 0, 5? Q H 7 jvfjx fs f 0 I fb -, 067 O ZX W ' 47 O ff ' 4' f , 5 O 4 . A f Q O -' fl X E A A I . Q7 ' H. T-: ,,. ,Q. Q Q If L' ' W5 F1 A D, f 9 I i11+kQig-553 ' J -W :ffl vf!2f,f' Y '4 lt' Q ,E ' -2 T-A liuig M f Q ' f yi ,',,' jA, f ,: nc 31, A xi6 .n,2'! W 'gt k 4gQy1r15:,.,1,,i I ,,, -, X ffl 4 :i.5yn7 q '33,-jl' U M3 . M ' '- ff , 1. I n I I I From flickering silent movies, to talkies, to technicolor, and to lifelike cinerama the motion picture industry has grown. Industry of another kind has brought Simmons College through its first fifty years. Five decades of growth and change produced the Simmons that the Class of 1953 will remember. To preserve your memories in a more tangible form than the mind,s eye, MICROCUSM records your years at Simmons on a roll of Ncellu- loid, and the camera eye helps you to live again your four years in college. f ff 14 h M 4 , K - I 5 70 U J fm , ' 'l Q' if U f : f 1 I .- I X Md ff A f I 'f' 17' ':,-' E s 22' 5 Q 1535 5 Wiaglwweat , ff , -' f,,,Z-,,- . 43 , X 42 f af Wm, fl, - ' 9 ff 'fnqlfl X ' 'S .,., I . 11 A , Y H w x ' if 1 J: p GCLDEN We flash back to 1902 . . . fifty years of Simmons College . . . 1399 - a charter is drawn and the College is incorporated . . . science, art and industry grow into our by-word . . . 1902 - Mr. Lefavaur becomes our first President and Miss Arnold, our first Dean. Two years later we are located on the Fens. The building grows . . . east and west wings are added. The dormitories grow . . . North and South Halls, the Befectory. The number of students increases yearly . . . by 1933, seven programs are developed - Library Science, Home Economics, Business, Nursing, Science, Social Work, and English. Mr. Bancroft Bentley becomes the second President JUBILEE f,,,,,ss:f Q' T9-MN 3'1?J'si ev- slsfkgsisfsiii' Ll QTY 1, -A i pei ,x , x v- k-1.3.2 'XV last' p n ,...,...-...,......,.., NA-J . of Simmons. In 19449 Miss Eleanor Clifton becomes our Dean . . . she and the Class of '53 are Freshmen together. 1952 - our Fiftieth Anniversary Celebra- tion - a mid-century jubilee . . . progress marches on with the laying of cornerstones to three new buildings . . . television and radio programs air our cause . . . the Presidents of neighboring colleges honor us at an Academic Convocation and discuss The Changing Role of Women . . . conferences on Education and Pro- fessional Opportunities for Women are led by well- lcnown speakers . . . a jubilee banquet ends a glorious celebration. Simmons survives the pains of growing . . . we are proud to be a part of her! The lights dim . . . the crowd is hushed . . . and the curtain rises . . . applause soon breaks the air . . . but the loudest acclaim bursts forth as the curtain falls . . . whether it's a play, an opera, or a movie. Credit should go where credit is due . . . not only to those on the stage . . . but the ones behind as well. Our own Simmons show . . . not the greatest on earth . . . but we do have wonderful administrators . . . bravos and cheers to them, our producers . . . those who set the stage and raised the curtain. And bouquets of roses to our directors - the faculty. Administration and Faculty The faculty dons ils cups und gowns for un avadenlil' lllllffll. Bliss Nlutlaek warmly wel- comes Frilzie King into lmr office. Mr. Grossman looks con- cerned as he checks a dis- puted point. Nlixed emotions are displayed upon entering Symphony Hall. 4 J L, J rr It e 1 ! 1 1 I e,.,,,,ee., L LJ -.,,, ..,.,. I lm! .Lu , . A e F iw, 1' 'a 1 A l I Lwwl Egg LQ ggi Qi , ,e I LW e,et ,ei 5 E mi LJ 'Ga President Bancroft Beazley President Bancroft Beatley and Dean Eleanor Clifton are known by every student as the chief administrators of Simmons. They are also known as two people who understand and continually work for the needs of the students. When John Simmons founded Simmons College, he directed that it should give instruction in Hart, science, and industry best calculated to enable the scholars to acquire an independent livelihoodf' Sinnnons follows another basic precept stated for every student in the annual catologue. It states that vocational education on the college level must rest on a Firm academic foundationg that there must be constant emphasis on the broad princi- ples which underlie vocational competence in any Held, that training in skills should be limited to those that are essential to success in initial em- ployment. When President Beatley reached 1952, he saw Simmons celebrate fifty years as a college. At that time he said that his work is still as satis- fying as in 1933 when he became the second presi- dent of Simmons. Producers cmd Dir During the gala jubilee celebration, President Beatley dedicated three new buildings on upper- class campus to bring all the students to one cam- pus. Now plans are underway for more college buildings. A library, a science building, and a social and health unit are part of the Simmons future. ' Next fall the School of Preprofessional Studies will become the School of Social Science. Stu- dents will receive a broad education with an added emphasis on social studies and w'ill then be pre- pared for either graduate study or immediate employment. The students may see President Beatley at a student-faculty tea, a college formal. perhaps eat- ing dinner at the home management house, play- ing baseball at the annual student-faculty game, or walking down the corridors. With his willingness to further student welfare, President Beatley is ready to build an even greater Simmons as the years go by. cfors of the Simmons Cineromo Dean Clifton is advisor for student activities and a manager of freshman guidance. With hu- man relations the main substance of her job, Dean Clifton is concerned with the personality of each girl and her personal problems. The students may see her at a Stu-G open meet- ing, eating dinner in the dining hall on upperclass campus, or just talking to someone in her ollice. ln- terested in interior decoration. she enjoyed plan- ning the interior of Arnold Hall. She likes meet- ing students and is present at many meetings. On the second floor of the college building, Dean Cliftonls daily calendar stays full of stu- dent appointments. Since she found personal work with students to be her main interest, Dean Clifton has established herself in her few years at Simmons as a most patient and understanding guide. After graduating from Goucher College and en- tering the business field, Dean Clifton chose to Left: Dlr. Sypher looks over a paper. Above: Nlr. Needham relaxes momen- tnrily. Dean Eleanor Clifton work directly with students. Her years before Simmons included the positions of Director of Stu- dents at the New Jersey College for Women, Field Advisor of the Camp Fire Girls, and Director of Admissions at Goucher College. Aiding President Beatley and Dean Clifton in their work are Vice-President Joseph Carton Need- ham and Wylie Sypher, Dean of the Graduate Di- vision. Both of these men are familiar figures in the classrooms and in conference groups. Their friendly spirit of understanding and their ready willingness to aid the student have endeared them to all. Our studio executives who keep the' Million dollar productions . . . directors to cast the roles . . . advertising and publicity . . . at Simmons someone to direct every phase of the college . . . for our benefit . . . and for the next generation. Mrs. Conyea keeping records of course credits and registration .... Miss Suther- land interviewing hopeful girls . . . orientation coming up for those successful . . . Mr. Bachelder handling facts and figures of financial matters . . . Mrs. Broadcorens, the Director of Publicity . . . plans for new projects . . . Miss Webb scouting up My x M-mm' fields for new resources . . . advice from Dr. Readdy of the medical staff . . . Miss Deacon keep- ing in touch with past students . . . contributions from Alumni . . . Miss Danielson of campus life . . . Miss Hanson interview's for our careers . . . and they faithfully and carefully keep the Simmons iilm rolling. :ms happy 3 Left and above: Miss Webb, Miss Deacon, Dr. Realllly. Below: Mrs. Broaflcorens, Miss Danielson, Miss Hanson. Eur ,Q- Nw Top-star billing for our fovorif By popular acclaim: Mr. Miller Dr. Rodwell A chair marked Director . . . detailed explana- tion on how to play this scene . . . c'Cut', . . . fran- tic hand waving . . . Hlet that take standi,-they are the big men in filmdom. At Simmons they are our faculty . . . instead of back-patting, A75 . . . Nall right, I'll explain it once moren . . . con- ferences in those smoke-filled rooms . . . time out for coffee, a cigarette and politics in Stowaway . . . a smile for everyone . . . ufriendlyj' is the word . . . great teamwork in hockey, basketball, and softball . . . maybe not pros . . . but wonderful sports. . . they are good pastry cooks, too . . . ask any judge for the cake baking contest, and 4- 431 E9 where would Spring Spree be without their all-star hitting and fielding? Instead of rehearsal notices, Class Cancelled . . . warm weather minus flu means mass exodus to the Backyard . . . We don't need to unionize-if we donat want a test, we say so . . . where else to find such a stimulating, fair and square, good-humored faculty. We feel like Prima Donnas . . . advice always freely given whether on personal or professional problems . . . we find that human relations really work around here. To all of them, professional and academic . . . to our faculty . . . one hundred per cent on the ap- plause meter. ro fessors f'T .IL- if Not a single star succeeds without training . . . and so with Simmons students . . . eight diferent schools . . . a galaxy of courses . . . the directors lack cameras, but wheels do whirl in every gal's head. A movie set in itself . . . the special period gown from PRINCE . . . the story from PUBLICATIONS . . . the LIBRARIANS delve into the historical research . . . then a cut . . . coffee and doughnuts from HOME ECONOMICS . . . from BUSINESS financial finageling for the production . . . bandages and penicillin for overworked actors from NURSING . . . the SCIEN- TISTS conjure up artificial rainstorvns . . . the sup- plementary touches by PREPRUFESSIONAL . . . and . . . lights . . . curtain! The Schools A business letter, copy for REVIEW, or anollzer term paper? The lest lube treatment for nurses and future scientists. Fashions and fabrics in focus for Prince and Home EC. Books and notes-the basis of preprofessional and li- brary training. 1 E 1902. Secretarial School . . . years of evolu- tion and constant reshaping of program . . . 194-2, School of Business . . . From Penmanship A to advertising, accounting, personnel, scientific secretarial, medical secretarial, general business, medical records administration, and bilingual sec- retarial studies . . . From the Huntington Cham- bers to 300 The Fenway. Exaeting standards . . . I An academic background spiced with practical skills producing a proficient graduate with her feet on the ground and her eyes on expanding horizons .... One plus one equals shorthand and typing .... L'Don't pay any attention to how fast your neigh- bor transcrihes-just go as fast as you canf' those sweaty lingers . . . no erasing . . . be accurate . . . margins . . . HA1n l reading too fast?', . . . uPlease read your transcription, Miss Simmons. ul got behind. Mr. Byers, so I made up my own letterf' onion skin . . . the red and the black-ribbons of of Pm 75955500511 PVQVU typewriter equals transcription. course . . . ez-erase or corrasahle liond . . . carbons hy the score .... Secretarial procedures . . . filing . . . good grooming . . . telegrams-word count . . . checks- made out to the order of whom? . . . graphs-it makes a difference which side is up .... Mimeograph . . . duplicator-that smelly fluid . . ediphone-round and round the turntable goes . . . dictapllone-better' than dictation . . . electric typewriters- and how do you set the margins? . . . calculators-no more columns of illegible figures and counting on fingers and toes . . . This must be the Oliice Machines class . . . Miss Sweeney wielding a small crowbar .... The advertising courses with Mrs. Coulter . . . girls waving scissors wildly in the air with one hand and flipping through magazines with the other . . . judge the copy . . . projects and more projects . . . visual appeal . . . eye catchers. . . . Personnel . . . a smile-always . , . guidance! t -'Wh-rs' - -bi ff, a s your pro em. . . . any talents or spe- cial skills . . . the work in the Admissions or Place- ment ollices-other peopfc have academic and em- ployment prolnlems too. . . . Accounting . . . net worth . . . liquidation . . . addition . . . subtraction . . . posting . . . Your Federal lncome Tax . . . lt7s three oiclock in the morning and l still have four accounting proh- lems, hut this one just won't come out rightfl Business Policies and Problems . . . interviews with Vlys. oFHce managers, ad men, personnel di- rectors . . . New England Mutual or John Hancock . . . Reports range from 30 to 120 typewritten pages . . . operating techniques. . . . The Business School Party . . . professors staged a modern dance class . . . Mr. Byers in a leotard, Miss Engler, Miss Sweeney, Mrs. Coulter, Miss 0'Brien, Mrs. Dickinson, Our Mr. Salsgiver . . . always there when we need him . . . guide, and of course, supreme Business Managerw. . earring procedure cmd proficiency Research, reading, and reporting occupy B. Olsson anfl P. Montal. K if fr 'W .vt- , , Business gals' pens take off like jet planes in dictation 'tflightsfi 1903. Sara Louise Arnold . . . The Department th the emphasis on of Household Economics wi skill rather than principles . . . 19311-, School of Home Econom ' and range of studies. The goal is fourfold: prep- aration for satisfying employment, home and fam- ily living, informed citizenship, and personal ics with a broader interpretation Srowth. After a year of basic bio and chem Cstruggle, struggle, boil and bubblet, we were on our way. Clothing 20 and Miss Gallivan . . . Foods 23 and ' ' 'r N' 'd Oh Miss Hord . . . hot rolls . . . crisp sala s . . . for the success of the puffy omelet. Psychology, organic chem . . . Mrs. Sargent and structural o biochem and physiology for h f textiles loffarithms from formulas. On t dieticians, mat or A , . . . D forgotten high school days . . . microscopes and nylon thread . . . labs and more labs . . . that 26- hour week .... Junior year . . . eight glorious weeks in home management house . . . a change to modern in the living room . . . how to thaw frozen strawberries five minutes before mealtime . . . snacks and the budffet . . . one morning a week at nursery school U . . . 'lLet's play a game instead of fightingf' Foods lthat's morej . . . bacteriology . . . nutri- t' n . . . settlement house work . . . trying to 10 ake supper on time . . . three White uniforms m s to scrub . . . quant. analysis for the textile con- scious . . . discussions on family relations . . . clothing field trips to tings . . . book reports . . . educa- tion ahead . . . preschool, consumer, home ec. Senior year . . . future thoughts . . . biting Hn- gernails before final demonstration . . . days . . . future teachers arising at six A.M. . . . hundred and one field trips catering service . . . home calls with the Gas d 1' Co .... experimental foods-baking pow er ais- its for two Weeks . . . testing, tasting . . . too Filene's French Shop fjust looking? . . . fit D field work future dieticians on a cu Feature-length preparation for H1 of is h lass darkly in textiles Seen throug a g ' D which are sunfast, sanforizml swatches. h Tailors chalk one up for Home Ec. w ere rl ' are oh, sew necessary. patterns an pms much milk . . . too much flour . . . non-existent lunch and more Held work days . . . scales and tri- angles for housing . . . tailoring . . . muslin . . . never getting to the Hreal material. Fitting in committee meetings . . . appointments with Miss Hanson . . . applications to be filled out. Mrs. D. Abbott and daily vitamin C requirement. . . Delving deeper into textile technology . noting and solving problems in diet therapy . . . running the lunchroom without running out of any- thing . . . Enthusiastic ventures into journalism, advertising, typing, music, art, and literature. The pride of accomplishment in cooking and culture. So many happy memories . . . of recipies gone wrong . . . of aromatic test tubes . . . of mouth- watering cakes . . . of threading needles . . . of spring suits with the personal touch . . . of hor- rible mistakoes and wonderful accidents. Seen in the future . . . an interesting, satisfying jobs-a ersonol touch Elrla Robb, Director of School of Home Economics Whatis cooking here-omelets, scrambled eggs, or a trial run of pancakes? Kenneth R. Shafer, Directors of School of Library Science 1902, a 'Lcharler school . . . now. an out- standing leader in size and reputation . . . 194-5, admitted first men as degree candidates . . . Originally a regional school . . . presently a na- tional institution. Under Mr. Shaffer two pro- grams were designed-one. a four-year undergrad- uate program leading to a BS.. and the other I1 two-semester plus one summer session for graduate students. A sound academic background . . . a complete program of professional studies . . . field trips and field work . . . a graduate fully pre- pared for positions of professional status. A wide array of opportunities for the future from administration to research specialists, from adult education to work with children . . . fasci- nating work and good salaries lthey say this isnlt important, hut . . . l. For three years liberal arts courses of our own choice lwell, almostl . . . the fourth year all our professional studies. Despite the comprehensive courses of the senior year, there Close-up of class 1 ' , Cataloging fun? Judging by the cheerful faces here it almost looks it-almost. are memories ol those frightful-but wonderful- years of growing up at Simmons. That First hour of Contemporary Society with the Pepsodent smile . . . from prehistoric man to the United Nations in one year .... American Literature with David lH. David Thoreau, that isl and the others from Brooks Farm . . , Economics . . . ah, what patience . . . if only more teachers in New England could sit in on Dr. Harley's course in education .... But probably what will remain foremost in our minds is senior year. Those terrifying experiences in Cat. and Classification . . . the 13th edition ll5!'iV?!l . . . CBI . . . KNOW you never, never, never . . il I can never remember that child's name . . . NlVly deaaah, if you do that you're going to get into trouble .... 7' Those times we'd like to wring Mr. Deweyls, lVlr. Cutter's, and Margaret lVlann's necks . . . then, that wonderful day when we found no red marks on our lab paper . . . lntroduction class with those get acquainted held trips. . . . And those blue Vlfednesday lectures . . . Mr. Booth and his eternal charts and graphs . . . func- tionalism . . . Did anyone ever do that term paper on a Survey of Surveysw? From that important Alexandrian library to the new and modernistic library at lVl.l.T .... those libraries that don't look like libraries . . . and the Reference Course. If only we could keep up-to-date . . . and to re- turn to the point of departure . . . Have I made this sufficiently confusing? . . . due Monday. . . . Remembering those organizations, periodicals, and books for lVliss Edge . . . How could so many books be fascinating? . . . those oral talks on half- read books . . . annotations and bibliographies . . . What objectives will you have in your library? These things we won't forget as We follow our various careers of marriage, child rearing, andfor library work. ation ond cross indexing What! We have to make secondary en- tries tracings-aml assign call numbers too? There are so many fascinating books and periodicals that there just isn't time. . . 1903 . . . the first group of eight nurses ap- peared in the Simmons classrooms. 1918 . . . the School of Public Health Nursing emerged from the early training programs and hospital affiliations. Director Anne Strong's new program to produce leaders in the nursing field . . . two years of college studies, two years of classes and practice at Massachusetts General Hospital, and one year of study in public health nursing. Well nursing . . . health nursing . . . pioneer nursing . . . and in 193-1 another step forward, the new School of Nursing at Simmons. a school whose students earned both the coveted Diploma in Nursing and the Bachelor of Science Degree. 1953 . . . a record of almost nine thousand nurses receiving some part of their education at Simmons College. Academic and professional . . . intellectual and scientific . . . where does it start? A dip into economics, art. literature, history. Longer hours in the labs. Bio 10 with Dr. Solinger and frog hunts along Muddy River. The wonders of en- docrinology with Dr. Rodwell. Remember the roller coaster rides at Nantasket? CSHUOS-this is sugar? Physicshan electrifying course! wllhe Old Lamplighterf' Counting the steps from Room 110 to the home ec lab. KWhere is the solar plexus, Mr. Shepro?A: Microbiology . . . culturing dishes from the din- ing hall. Colfee time during the final-more relaxing than a sedative. s'Look. Mrs. Witton, live discovered a new bacteriumfi Sociology . . . psychology . . . child development . . . foods and nutrition-how to make trays look interesting . . . calories, color. texture, consistency. Eight weeks at Evans . . . principles and practices of pharma- cology and nursing .... The human pincushion becomes immune to measles, mumps, chicken-pox, death, and taxes. Nursing l . . . getting acquainted w'ith Massa- Experience plus culture highlight thc: Social Ethics waits while Hlr. Hadley' vnlivens the lecture with ll joke or two. vhuselts General Hospital. Smooth, impersonal efhciency becomes familiar. Antiseptic atmosphere and rubber-heeled shoes are old friends. From loting books to toting bedpans in one easy lesson. The operating rooms . . . that appendix? The orthopedies ward . . . trac- tion, s lint, cast-where is the patient? Shall P we send the doctors back to school for a class in calligraphy . . . or is it hieroglyphics? arn some more until the What did I do with Learn, work, and le fourth year is part of the past. But it's not past- the knowledge and training carry over that four- week recuperation-vacation, and continue during the months at Childrenis, McLean, and the Boston Lyinv-In, More learning and more work in that U fifth year with the Boston Visiting Nurses Associa- tion. More yet in the professional career to fol- l Y. And it all adds up to learning that stimu- ow lates and work that satisfies . . . the goal of the SllDlHOI1S ll ll FSC. - ----.- M -3 ----ri U New e e I v n n Evangeline H. Nlorris, Director of School of Nursing S0 I , A S Q 'rm Q Q X f' W .-i' r W: I as A The ,52 Summer Session group cheer- fully lines up en masse aml in uniform. 1938, the baby of the schools . . . Dr. Harrison L. Harley first and now retiring di- rector of the School of Preprofessional Studies. A baccalaureate degree . . . the prerequisite for graduate study . . . broad general study on the undergraduate level . . . specialization on the graduate level. A background in . . . EC. 20 and Mr. Nichols whose untiring patience finally pulled us through . . . English electives . . . HI like Wylie . . . ul go Miller , . . . Hawthorne's American History . . . You mean the Pilgrims werenit Puritans? . . . a million and one reasons for the Civil Vvar .... Mr. Bush's philosophic art lectures . . . who can spell Quetzalcoatal, Ashurnasirpal, Praxiteles . . . wonder trips to the Museum of Fine Arts and all the people who joined our group because they thought Mr, Bush was giving a guided tour . . . the beauties of the Wiriged Victory of Samothrace . . . th-e Dying Gaul . . . the Laocoon. . . . 0 Il-gilt:-d:3iloli.SIdl!iZnIsiyi:f Preprofessional Studies ' G n G I Political theory students study the major premises of Aristotle wih Mr. Tollefson. Making records with Monsieur Newman . . . would we ever get that downeast twang out of our voices? . . . singing French Christmas carols . . . Comparative government . . . Mr. Tt,Dll6'lStJll'S fascinating accent land he can bake toolt . . Reichsrat ReichstagfAch Himmel!! Ethnic Groups . . . endogamy . . . we came out ready to change the world . . . Psych of Adjust- ment . . . Mr. Deanes technical words which had us Carrying a dictionary to class to follow the lecture . . . am l psychotic or just neurotic. . . . Contemporary Music . . . Stravinsky and Shosta- kovitch arenit so had after all . . . wonder if l could he converted to modern art as easily .... Child Psych and Dr. Harley's jokes . . . how did any one person ever cram so many exciting and interesting experiences into one lifetime .... Home Ec. 10 tjust in case we happen to get marriedl . . . Mrs. East and JAMES . . . Swedish stainless steel . . . dinners for two for 75 cents . . . comparative shopping . . . a three-hour take home hnal that took fifteen hours .... Modern Drama . . . another dip into culture . . . Boz and his tremendous enthusiasm . . . the as- tounding numher of fires that the engines rushed to during ninth hour . . . The Way of the WcJ1'ld . . . Hedda Gahlerf' . . Volunteer Services . . . a chalice to put our new learning to work . . . coffee hours with 'LJim Hadley and Steve Deane . . . What will I ever do with that child-she is continually disrupting the whole group . . . Lahor Relations with Mr. Jacks . . . mitlweslimmungV' . . . laughed like idiots . . . Social Statistics . . . standard deviation lwhatever that means! . . . Psychological Meas- urement . . . Mr. Johnson and Sociology . . . social norms . . . class. caste. and stratification. Four wonderful years behind us-more study ahead of us . . . hut always our undergraduate memories accompanying us. 'ies present o cultural double-feature The Pierson Product Nloment Correlation Technique-what does it all mean? Mr. Kohl discusses the League of Nations' failures with a group of history majors. ln 1912. a new program of training set up in cooperation with the Womenis Educational and Industrial Union . . . the Prince School was formed in 1915 and in 1918 became a separate entity. Post graduatle courses gave way to a four-year undergraduate program . . . salesman- ship . . . textiles . . . store operation and store organization. lVlerchandising from all angles . . . student teachers . . . specially tailored clinics. surveys. and publications. The challenge of the future being met by gals with a flair for fashion, a passion for personnel. and practical know-how and experience .... The practical foundation was applied under the polish of glamour. Textiles . . . cooperative re- search . . . hundreds of swatches . . . color and line . . . magazines and scissors became as famil- iar as coliiee and doughnuts in the lounge and the ever present cigarette smoke as we studied the Color lVlanual. Miss Chambers and accounting .... How's your credit rating? The Retailer in the Modern World a la Mr. Beckley and his marvelous sense of humor. Fashion . . . the 4'Louis and Victorian and the 'GGay Ninetiesi' . . . not to mention the paper due much too soon .... Our bachelor Blakeslee . . . a wonderful substitute for a director in Europe and the perfect class advisor .... Field trips en masse . . . always with a hat. . . . Shopping problems and suspicious store detectives . . . Spring in the New York market . . . Oh. the thrill of it alll And the aching feet durinff Christ- C mas field work . . . the 1551i discounts that were so inviting . . . professional wardrobes made up of borrowed clothes. Human Relations-even in retailing . . . people, personnel. problems . . . Mrs. Schwaab and two pairs of glasses . . . Salesmanship-good skits and bad . . . Part time jobs in lfileneis. Stearns, Jays. . . ' Behind the scenes in retailing with ll7lll'll '10 S S1'lll'llllllllg Il IIUIIPF' 01' llll Pxlllll. ls it color, line, and design, a guest speaker, u fashion show, or u movie? 1 L vi-.cl 3 on -,LI-6 ,g , ,Ll r.1',-...A 2 his-2' 1 Subscriptions to Vogue and Ha1'per's were paici for with our job earnings. The hundreds of let- ters urging us to renew subscriptions . . . the clock in the Oak Room with the independent spirit . . . the Yellow Room, the Green Room, the Olive Room-would we ever know which was which! ' The little things now stored in memories . . the white magnolia blossoms in the front yard . . . the constant struggle to get books in the library . . . the poodle from the Academy Moderne . . . The 11th hour paper-typing sessions in the kitchen . . . Prince Club meetings in the lounge . . . sneakers and sox on rainy and paper days .... Now the four years are over. Now we can test our training and education with full time jobs as assistant executives . . . buyers . . . employment interviewers. College has given us a background . . . practice work, experience . . . and training courses, the iinishing touches. We are on our own. e focus on fashion ,..f -fff K Director of Prince School of Retailing TALES OF THE RETAILER ll la Mr. Beckley. 1934, Dr. Robert Cay . . . founded School ol English . . . 1951, present School of Publication Experiments in Copy and proof . . . practical ap- plications on Review and in printshop. A gen- eral background combined with specific training leads to a career . . . books, magazines, advertising, publicity, public relations, journalism, radio . . . the unlimited. The language of specialization . . . the symbols of a trade . . . the art of proofreading . . . comma, cap, reverse, wf, the Chicago Manual of Style and A.B.C. of English. Usage. Trials and tribula- tions . . . triple vision and sentence structure. Business 35 . . . shorthand and typing . . . lt's much faster via abbreviations and two fingers. Secretarial procedures and 20,000 Words. . . . Journalism introduced the Fessenden Formula . . . planning, producing, placing, publicity . . . the Christiam Science Monitor and our own print- shop . . . composing sticks, leads, the press, and Garamond type. . . Graphic Arts introduced a world of new words and phrases. Cropping and copyfitting . . . picas and points . . . pix and cuts . . . black, grey, and white vs. the four-color process . . . Publishers' Weekly and the Production Yearbook . . . the gore of a bleed with HQ inch for trim and dragon's blood to avoid undercutting .... A creed for accuracy had been laid dow'n . . . A mania for details became a universal grand pas- sion. AIGA followed by Layout and Design . . . followed by rubber cement . . . followed by draw- ing boards, T-squares, proportion wheels, type books . . . free forms . . . paste ups . . . French folds . . . and THE PROJECT! The people merged into personalities. Boz became a director and a friend . . . Miss Williams, the editor with a heart . . . Ginny, the assistant with the know-how . . . Sandy, the gal with the paper. The professional standards were set by Mr. Turner and the basic principles. of design . . . D.G.V. and his relentless pursuit of de- Copy, pix, and cuts equal on osco --........--......,., I' -fic' Mr. Fessenclen emphasizes a basic point in publicity to an absorbed class. tails and devices . . . nFez expounded 'S accuracy, accuracy, and names making news. . . . Bodoni became an open book to those in the know . . . halftones were usually square ups. and a line cut was easier on the pocket book. Air- brushes aided nature . . . a Ben Day screen was flat gray . . . a joke could cost a fortune. . . . Justification . . . sterios . . . mats . type . . . flicks 351 . . . Wllhatls a line-for-line type up forget the overlay . . . Jargon of gutters . . . niethocls, results, and costs. ultls an ish custom. The-re's the long wa f th . . . deadlines . . . . . mono- coffee in and donlt and ratios old Span- y, e short way . . . the Valz way. Therels a character count, a word count, and type not made of rubber. Practice makes perfect and field work brings experience . . . roughs turned int ffl o .O ossies and the bewildering into the familiar. We can never forget our points, picas, and projects . . . the past was a preview of professional- ism . . . the future, a bright prospect of success. inni accuracy, -ll :ei uifitgrtpil nf N ng prgd UCHQI1 F. Dtrector of School of Publication SYS g'0ne third pix, 2X3 copy, modern out- look-shoulflrft take y0lL long',-Turn- ' I . N. DeWitt and G. C ' ers nyout urter play the house organ serenafle in the Gay Room. 1902, one student in the School of General Sci- ence . . . 1904, Hrst four degrees awarded in science . . . From chemistry to biology to physics, math. medical school preparation . . . fostered nursing until the School of Public Health Nursing was established. New fields, constantly expanded horizons . . . 1942, School of Science . . . special war programs . . . terrific demand for graduates . . . majors in biology, chemistry, physics, orthop- tics, physical therapy. . . . Introduction via the oderiferous corridors. Ini- tiation . . . chem, bio, physics, math, labs, lab coats . . . future scientist . . . boon to humanity . . . dis- coverer of rare elements . . . initiation over . . . settling down to selecting a major . . . a con- glomeration of courses . . . inorganic chem . . . quantitative analysis . . . qualitative . . . or- ganic . . . advanced organic . . . physical . . . bi- ology . . . microbiology . . . anatomy . . . physi- ology . . . electricity . . . optics . . . electronics . . . mechanics . . . calculus . . . differential equa- tions . . . here were the classes to choose from. Meeting people . . . loving every minute of il . . . work, more work . . . cats and rats . . . acids and bases . . . the cartoons and daft-nitions on the Science School bulletin board . . . the poems in Dr. Blissis lab . . . Miss Granarals friendly en- couragement . . . Mr. Solingeris 4'Ontogeny re- capitulates phylogenyw . . . Dr. Rodwellfs gra- cious and charming manner . . . Dr. Blissis jokes starting with wfhat reminds me of a little storyw . . . Mrs. Sargent's G'l'm sure you all remember this, but I'll explain it anywayw . . . Dr. Timm's plaintive words: uPlease don't take my notes into that acid-spattered lab of iniquity. And making friends with fellow scientists was easy because everyone seemed to be suffering through the same things. Spilling a yield at the end of an experiment in Organic Chem lab . . . acid deterioration of watches, stockings, and lab coats . . . an open window in quant lab when yields are on lab desks . . . Bromine burns . . . the question 4'What is a Cotyledonfp' being asked in an exam . . . learning classifications in biology The spectacle of life, os see Frosh hard at work in inorganic chemis- try testing, analyzing, mul washing up. 'Nw --ag -W ..j,-jxmwia in Ginny Huppi studying in the chem lab giving careful consirleration to the facts. '..,..., . . . losing about 10,000,000 organisms in bac- leriology lab . . . Hydrogen sulfide asphyxiation . . . not being able to see anything under the microscope freshman year when the professor says itis there, and seeing things that aren't there, senior l list electrical circuit in year . . . making tie 1 physics lab . . . calculus problems . . . logarithms . . . thermodynamics . . . equilibrium . . . that's ci 'e. Even with what four years has tried to pro ut the variety of fields and majors in this school friendships have been made and retained through social activities. Ellen Richards Club . . . the next meeting of the Northeastern Section of A.C.S. will ' - N 1 L l. . held . . . This IS a game of common sense l Ju we how much common sense do we have left after a day of hard work?t . . . the barbecue in the back- yard . . . Held trips . . . visiting industrial labs . . . work and play . . . preparation for a job and for life. irough Q microscop John A. Timm., ' e Director of School of Science Wy' Umler such watchful eyes the fractional N distillation should be successful. Swimming pools, night clubs, dinner at the Brown Derby . . . a Hollywooditeis relaxation. But what about Simmons? A convertible for every star . . . or is it a club for every student? Press notices from three publications. Flash bulbs from the Publicity Office. The four all-college organizations have top billing . . . Student Government with an all star cast . . . NSA, AA, and Forum in separate acts. Is there time for everything? Checkv the Hred booki' . . . that which isnit an organization can still be an institution . . . a fourth for bridge . . . coffee time at Stowaway or Yueh's . . . Have you heard? But there's no time now - the show must go on! Student Activities Yeuh always brings smiles lo the rake aml coffee crowd. Will il be bookli, staiionery. a gift, 1-anl. or lcnick-kmmk. Stowaway and a cojfee break make exam cram periods easier. The lights are low, the gowns long, the evening enchanted. x . B 4 A. L V. Dey, B. Birclsey, J. Robertson C. Hurrl, B. Cofman, B. Poole Siu-G Officers Present.. Siu-G Council Honor Board H. Bloom, N. Crerie, B. Poole, V. Dey, S. Sotiropoulos. A. Robbins, E. Duval, S. Hollgeman, L. Cofman, J. Robertson J. Laurence, L. Cofman. C. Hurd, J. Robertson. B. Birflsey. C. Hurd, B. Poole, S. Bellini, R. Axelroll, L. Sprague. S. Bvnflvr. Nl. Plwlan.. A. WllShbllFll. S. Duval. , . ' - V. N '1, .- - ', -.2 f. ifFf Ti,,.5?'If-'I.LIl.':'1Lllflfflit!1C'l!322fif1fY'i'1i1iL1ti'i?3E' .1-.:.-N41-rua-sm.:-.w -4 Stars in the Student Production Student Government-Hof the students, by the students, for the studentsf, During the very first year of Simmons College, plans for a student government were formulated by Sara Louise Ar- nold, the first dean, and the students. Together they founded the Student Guild. the first meeting of which was held just one year after Simmons entered the academic world. Une of the Hrst issues discussed was that of an honor system. The faculty agreed to try it out. and now after fifty years the honor system is the most important ideal of Simmons. The chairman of Honor Board and the chairman of Social Activities work under Stu-C. The vice- president of Stu-G is chairman of the Dormitory important link between the student and Stu-G, and between the student, the faculty, and the adminis- tration. Senior Formal Dinner, a new tradition, was held in l7ebruary. The members of Stu-C Council were dressed as characters from Alice In Won- derland and entertained seniors and their faculty guests with their skits and foolishness. Field Day is another Simmons tradition, with the student-faculty baseball game as the highlight of the day. Christmas weekend is also a Stu-C project. It included, this year, Compets, the for- mal at the Hotel Statler, and a Jazz concert. The Freshman-Sophomore Valentine Party and Freshman-Junior Jamboree, May breakfast for the Council. All student activities are carried out sophomores and seniors, Stu-G May party for through Stu-C. newly elected club officers, Simmons Pops Night Regular open meetings give both the faculty at Symphony Hall, as well as many teas and in- and students a chance to voice their opinions on formal get togethers are also formulated by the school issues. These meetings also constitute an Social Activities Committee of Stu-G. Dorm Council FP. Cray, E. Filer, A. Carlough, J. Knight, L. Cofman, C. Hurd, lB. Poole, I. Robertson, H. Parks, D. Seibert, B. Bickelhaupt. I. King, B. Birzlsey B. Grijfeth, S. Wagner, M. Myers Social Activities gn-' iwf wt Priscilla Hale, MIC Eilitur, is optimistic. Editorial Board works on copy' for MIC '53. Literary heads plan what l,lPy,ll incliule. MIC films the octi Creating is hard, and this yearis MICROCOSM had its share of lahor pains. To plan and produce four years of memories, glad times and sad times. confronted the editors last May. Priscilla Hale. the editor-in-chief, by telephone and mail tried to keep in touch with the staff during the summer. but it wasn't till the first day back to school that the real work started. Priscilla did the editing- she watched her ideas grow and she supervised the job until lVlIt: was a fullgrown product of the Class of '53. First the layout had to he decided upon. The entire editorial hoard met weekly to decide upon the major issues, and with the help of Mr. Valz, technical advisor, settled the basic format of the yearbook. Priscilla with Jackie Fink, the art editor. drew up the layouts. The theme was decided upon and the staff settled down to work. Pat Gannon, the photography editor. with Peggy Downey. associate editor, met with the photographer for senior pic- tures and around the campus candids. Janet Riordan, literary editor, and June Wildes, assistant literary editor, had the task of writing out four years of college activity. Almost any day during January a visitor to the Editors' Room on 1 1 I l 1 i 4 sacked travelogue of four years would see June and Janet bending over the round table with a glassy look in their eyes, murmuring something about heads for a sixty-character line. Throughout the year Ann-lVlarie Nilsson kept the circulation mounting with the Tuesday MIC booth in the front hall. The 'lpay as you go plan kept the money coming in and the senior bills going down. Mary Harrington, the advertising editor, cir- culated around town and collected an imposing number of ads. And Sonya Nylund did a splen- did job at her diflicult task ol keeping the books straight and the budget in hand throughout the different crises during the year. After the copy. cuts, headlines, and type were Hnally rounded up, Liz Tyrrell and her stall' took over the technical end to proofread and count picas. After her staff caught the stray uwidowsu and misspellings, the proofs were sent back to the printer and Hnally came back to the Editors, Room for the linal cutting and pasting into book form. The yearbook didnat just grow. It is a result of many long months of steady planning and Work- ing. lt is with great pleasure that the editors can turn over to the Class of 753 a record of four years caught in the camera eye of MICROCOSM. Sales- Ads campaign strategy takes shape. Valz makes cropping almost a pleasure . . . Sonya, Pat, aml Peg- pesos, pix, aml pasteups All the news thot fits The editorial staff grins as the technical staff ponders. Reporters check an assign- ment while the all manager measures. four pages Thursday is NEWS-day for the ma- jority at Simmons. But for those com- prising the paper's staff almost every day is NEWS-day. Assignments go up Wednesday after- noon. Then the rush to cover them begins. Monday noon all stories are due funless the hapless reporter has a darned good excuse! J. Tuesday is D-Day, Deadline Day. All copy goes to the printer at 4:45 p.m. Staff mem- bers are required to spend most of their free periods in the Editors' Room rewriting, running errands, and tak- ing care of the many details so in- evitable on a newspaper. A fact soon discovered by everyone on NEWS is that Tuesday afternoon is the best time to stay away from Madam Editor unless there's a good reason to ap- proach her. She suffers from the worst form of the occupational disease, Tues- dayafternoonitisg and curses the day she discovered it was printer's ink running through her veins. NEWS' masthead changes every February when the new staff takes over. Thus the greenhorns have a semester to obtain advice from the re- tired staff. In September they are on their own. NEVVS has never missed a sche- duled printing despite the work and cries of Weill never till it this week which go into each issue. It always comes through, and it's always well- worth the trouble. h.A Q x.11 , X1 .311 .1 ' V glfjl we K 1 2 - , EWS hae Price of Education U. S. colleges and utiiversitios nun -.um mt 1011! lox 111-1.111 1 g p y mt there is one slrlijvvt they const tent w ne-glut 1 if-tu 1 K1 - 111 H d D A d C f C 1nd this sctttexwe about the lin1n11ml111-1- tn V 'S 111' Ill 111111 mon Q n 1 Tint-3 xnngazim- lust work, wc uouduul to uh it x11 nt th 11011 ti H ,, 1 , lm , U, K , 1 inn applies to Sinnnonbz t'0l'.1'Vt'll ioul,h tu c-ol 1.51 its 111-t IN nu 1 L tn 1 1 ll 1 1 1111 N: i ,, 1 A. .,. ,.,. 11111111 for iwsvarcli. perhaps it 11111 'ut 1t 1 1 11 x it ' t th it 111 had Jn-.l nuntlx tuvntd void ol 1 bond md 5 nought. 4. .tonfemporary Ari Inshfufe 'hrives Well In Sfaid Boston by Cynthia Laine l Thv Institute? .lust walk strut fit down tn tue! llllll :wht on wwbury, and you'lI hit it a few iloui 1-ss it. Full-lcttgtlx wintlow. Thcx ll ithibit now, E mud with this bit of into. the lttown tuurist ur the Boston initiate mms on to Newliurv Street :md st-uns shop windows for the words. ture of C'nnteu1pura1'y Art. But ilit, 111 ntinutv! Are you in the Nois- ty Street, fashionable boz11'1twa1lk of Jaton, two minutes from staid. tmtztliln Beacon Hill? Contemporary 'tt Ilow did this revolution come iittt '? S 1, . 19311395128 llass Of 1956 Tops -frevious Enrollment freshman enrollment of 315 stu Year is than it has reporters and Hobart check the copy. v N ,V 953. li ul 1 0 ttl ls tt the editorial shotgun Madam Editor threatens? The stuff rushes to meet the flerulline for Wiriter Issue. Dorothy Willialns, editor and chief consultant, confers with Virginia Bratton, answer man and printeris devil. Review and Prinfshop-ideas, co Among the student publications there is a unique magazine, the Simmons Review, prepared by stu- dents for alumnae. The Review is a senior publi- cation project which gives an up-to-date report of student, administration, and alumnae news in its articles and columns. To give you an idea of what the course aims to do, let's follow a story through. An article starts as a brain wave and is transformed by a miraculous process into a rough draft which is given to Miss Williams to edit. This is known as the usweating-outi' period while the blue pencil is worn down. Then the girl has a conference with Miss Willianis about revision and corrections. Steps one, two, and three are repeated as often as necessary. This ends the creative process. The production work begins with a rough layout of the article which may be revised at a confer- ence with the student art editor. Once the layout is decided, the girl can type the copy on a lline- I--Q D. llyolfe and V. Bratlon pull a proof on The Timill Sexf, Review nrt check 1 B. Chellis, Turrmll, IU. Rosen- zwe-ig. roof, posfeup, ond publication for-line basis. The next step is to mark up the copy for the printer specifying the type face, type size, and the length of line. YVhile the copy is being set at the printer's the girls crop the pictures to be used and they are sent to the engraver. By now, the galley proofs have returned from the printeris and she starts to read them for errors. The same process takes place with the page proofs. The final step in production work is the preparation of a paste-up dummy which shows the correct position of the copy, headlines, by-line, pictures, and captions. The last phase in the birth of an article is the publicity. Each girl must make two posters pub- licizing her articles. And then she sells the hn- ished magazine at the Review booth. Multiply this complete process by three articles and you have the requirements of the course. Ac- tually the Review is set up as a publishing labora- tory which tries to simulate the conditions of a commercial publication. And sometimes the Re- view ugoes them one better. And just across the-hall from the Review is the Printshop. taught by Ginny Bratton. where only last summer Barbara Chellis and Donna Wolfe published Tlie Timid Sex and Utlier Light Essays by Dr. Robert M. Gay. This is just a resume of the gigantic amount of work that went into the book. They set the type for ninety-six pages of text by hand. They read the galleys and corrected the errors and then separated the material into pages. After this, they cut all their own paper. Donna drew the pen and ink illustrations which the engraver converted into engravings. Both girls printed the book in two colors which meant running each page through the press twice. The next step was cutting and folding the sheets and assembling the pages. The final phase of the book w'as completed when the girls hand-marbled their own paper for the cover and hand-bound each one of the four hundred and fifty copies. The course in the Printshop is not restricted to students in the School of Publication alone. Any- one may elect it, although its practical value is greatest in connection with publications. Academy, the Honor Society of Simmons, was started thirty years ago and achieved official rec- ognition in l9Ll3. Each year, in November, the new members eligible to Academydthose who have a cumulative average of 3.2-are invited to join. Stephen Deane of the Psychology Depart- ment was the speaker this year, at the annual Academy Dinner. The members are then privileged to wear the blue and gold ribbon under the collars of their graduation gowns symbolizing their academic achievements. Academy holds an annual theatre party, and sponsors an All-College movie or speaker each year as well. Academy members serve as an inspiration to us all, proving the fact that one can be ha brain and still have plenty of time for fun besides. with- out showing a trace of that so-called Prison Pal- lor. A surprising number of student oHicers are also members of this organization. Academy girls are among the most attractive and vivacious to be found in the College today. We congratu- late them alll Acad em y J. Jackson, B. W'urren, D. Goldberg Ellen Richards 'Everyone open his mouthl' shouted the lec- turer, and the next instant a huge explosion rocked the room. Yve expected to see the whole building collapse about our heads, but nothing happened and gradually everyone relaxed. We smiled sheepishly as we realized that the guest speaker had only exploded some hydrogen to illustrate a point in his lecture. a new member of Ellen Rich- ards described a meeting. These interesting lectures are only part of the varied program of the Ellen Richards Club. Ellen Richards is open to all members of the Science School. Its purpose is to stimulate interest in science and to help members know each other and the faculty better. There are several traditional meetings: the first meeting, to acquaint students and faculty, the next, a Christmas partyg and in May, a barbecue in the back yard following a student-faculty soft- ball game. Another tradition is the ski-weekend right after midyears. Ellen Richards is a member of the lntercollegiate Chemical Society. to which it sends, each year, a senior delegate and a junior alternate. M. Tobin, L. Tyrrell Anne Strong This club is for all student nurses at Simmons including those at Massachusetts General and other hospitals. At their monthly meetings the girls share their nursing experiences and enjoy an eve- ning that is educational and full of fun. This year the club sponsored speakers repre- senting many fields of nursing, including two French nurses who spoke on nursing in their nativc country as compared to the U. S. '6Anne Strongersv are particularly famous for their unique food sales. Who will ever forget their baking contest for the male faculty which provided much amusement. plus some very tasty eating. Proceeds from these food sales are used to send delegates to the biennial nursing conven- tion. Last year four girls attended the convention held in June, at Atlantic City. Two club traditions are the annual cookout in the backyard, and a tea in the spring. At the cookout, nursing sophomores are introduced to the club and to their fellow nursing students. The tea. at which the Gideon Society presents New Testaments to the junior nurses, concludes the year's activities. C. Higgins, S. Carver, N. Schultz, H. Connor The Home lfconomics Club olifers a monthly opportunity for the Home Economics majors to come together from their specialized fields. Each meeting brings fun. a good speaker, and food pre- pared by the girls. This year the lirsl meeting began with the pres- entation of the Borden Award. The award is given each year to the Home Economics senior with the highest scholastic average. It was pre- sented this year to Joyce W1'ight. Throughout the year each meeting brought a new subject. ln November a representative from the Dupont Company discussed synthetic fibers. The latest fashions were shown in February and in March Virginia lVlorganstern of the United Fruit Company gave a fruit demonstration. The Christmas project and the May banquet were the special features of the year. During the December meeting the members made tray favors and gingerbread cookies for several wards of 'thc Childrenls Hospital. At the banquet the old oflicers honored the nnew management and Miss Robb, director of the Home Economics School. talked of her trip to the Near East. Home Economics E. Burr, D. Goldberg, N. Billings, C. Rose 'id J. Charlaml, S. Nicot, IU. Schumb, J. Fink, N. Rogal O20 Club The enthusiastic members of 020, the club for Library Science School members, are engaged in an active campaign to revise, improve, and expand the Club's program and scope. Meetings which now serve to break the heavy class schedule and as a source of information about the field are also becoming more socially oriented. In particular, the Club has undertaken volun- teer service at the Childrenis Hospital. Members circulate among the wards helping children to choose books and reading to those who are not able to read to themselves. This project has been gratifying to the volunteers. a great help to the hospital staff, and a pleasant diversion for the patients as Well. The monthly Club meetings introduced such speakers as Miss Louise Lucas of the Fogg Art Museum who spoke on special librarianships. In December, the lirst food sale was held with dona- tions of food and time from faculty and students. The Christmas party, the annual U20 banquet, and a picnic in May helped acquaint the mem- bers with each other and with the faculty of the School of Library Science. A. Lord, V. Lee, M. Powers After a long day learning about color and line, fashion, merchandising, and the retailing field, members of the Prince School like to gather in their lounge at a Prince Club meeting to discuss such related subjects as field work, new develop- ments in retailing, clothes, dates, and assignments. ln short, the Prince Club which is made up of all the juniors, seniors, and graduate students in the Prince School, is devoted to promoting the social and school interests of its members. The popular Wednesday morning coffee hours serve to inform as well as relax. Friendships be- tween students and faculty are strengthened with informal chats over coffee and cigarettes. Perhaps the most popular social event of the Club is the annual fall tea dance-the biggest and best of the numerous acquaintance dances. The Oak Room becomes a ballroom for the occasion and the affair is usually a successful talking point for days. The grand climax of inter-student relationship comes with the welcome back party given by the juniors in honor of the seniors after the field work period. Prince Club Sock and Buslcin Make-up, well-thumbed scripts. costumes and all the other paraphernalia of the stage charac- terizes this hard working group of thespians at Simmons. Sock and Buskin sponsors two productions annu- ally. both of which. this year. were presented in the Boys' Latin School Auditorium. The first was 'Lt-ompetsf, held during All-College weekend, at which the freshman, sophomore, and junior classes competed in one-act plays, with a bouquet ol roses and a wooden 'loscaru going to the cast of the winning play. The second presentation of the club was Spring Production. which, with some help from nearby menls colleges, is always an outstanding success. A new activity of the club this year was to present psychological dramas in various psy- chology classes in cooperation with the Psychology Department. A new' member of Sock and Buskin is called an apprentice. After 30 hours of work during a two-year period, the student receives a triangular- shaped key. becoming a voting business member. Ten hours work yearly are necessary thereafter in order to retain the key. J. Marley, R. Anzivino, M. Doyle Scaling the octavesu of vocal music from high C to low C, the Clee Club was 50 voices strong this year. First Semester found the Clee Club, under the direction of Mr. Burton A. Cleaves, practising every other Wednesday night as Well as every Monday afternoon. The group sponsored several step-sings, with the Christmas Sing a memorable one. They pre- sented a joint art exhibit and Clee Club concert with Mr. Robert Hunter, impressionist painter, as the speaker. ln November the Clee Club joined with lVl.l.T. in an informal concert and dance. Their Christmas engagements included a program at the Medford Wromenis Alliance Club and the Annual Christmas Concert at Simmons. The big project of the year for the Clee Club was the concert tour to army camps and hospitals in the First Division area of New York and New Jersey in the spring. Baccalaureate and Commencement are always busy times for the Clee Club members, too, for these tw'o events would not be complete without the singing of Ave Verum and the Commencement Hymn. Glee Club E. Cassidy, D. McCo1r1b, M. Dee 4'Focus, contractions, technique. leaps. falls. di- rectionw-are all part of the vocabulary and un- derstanding of members of the Modern Dance Club. Members are students interested in the dance as an art and who show some ability for dancing. Besides the regular Thursday classes taught by advisor Mrs. Anne Greene. students have extra practice sessions on Saturday morning and also participate in master classes taught by famous professional dancers. Because practice hours are long and dance routines must be practiced to per- fection. the Club is limited to 25 members. The girls often attend performances of dancers including Jose Limon. Pearl Primus, Martha Graham. and Doris Humphrey. The Club is espe- cially famous for its dances to folk ballads. Jazz numbers have been popular as have the primitive and oriental dances. This year as usual. the Modern Dance Club participated in dance symposiums with several Boston colleges. The major program of the year was the Spring Production. presenting a group of new numbers and some of the best liked dances from last year. The Club also danced at Spring Spree and Student Invitation Days. Modern Dance Club L. Straw, M. Irvine, J. Stacey Christian Science The Christian Science Organization is one of the oldest at Simmons. its by-laws dating from 1912. The Club holds weekly meetings, with testi- monies and lessons often given by students. Chris- tian Science sponsors an annual lecture, this year in November. to which the entire college is invited. The lecturer was John D. Pickett of Chicago. lllinois. A reception is given every Spring featuring a local speaker connected with the Mother Church or one of its branches. There is an informal get- together afterwards and refreshments are served. Members often go out to dinner together-dutch treat of course-then attend services at the Mother Church. They also visit the Christian Science Organiza- tions at colleges in the vicinity, such as Harvard and M.l.T. Often the regular monthly meetings of these clubs are attended, or the Simmons Chris- tian Science Organization is invited to a lecture and informal discussion. One of the most active clubs at Simmons. Chris- tian Science owes its success to its formula for keeping its members interested and informed. A. Bryant, C. Pim, E. Bates YZ! Q'-r K A. Sioras, M. Chnkiris In addition to regular monthly business meet- ings, the Eastern Orthodox Club of Simmons held a series of social meetings at which members of different nationalities in the Orthodox faith could become acquainted. A welcome meeting for the freshmen in early October was followed by an Acquaintance Dance in the Lounge on October 18. Students from sev- eral Boston colleges were invited. On Novem- ber 21, the members attended the lVI.l.T. Technicon Dance, and on December 14, the Tufts Snowflake Dance. There was also a bowling party and a Christmas party in December. A Valentine Dance. a picnic in the early spring. and the annual Mothers Day Dinner were also included in the activities. The Club expressed its appreciation to its spiritual advisor, Rev. James Caucouzes, his assist- ant, Rev. Bacopoulous, and lVlrs. Bacopoulous at a tea in January. The Club also attended vesper services at the Creek Cathedral in Boston. After one of the serv- ices. Dr. Case of Boston University was the speaker. This year greater emphasis was placed on joint activities promoting better relations between mem- bers of all faiths. ' Orthodox Club P. Vaka, Mr. Newman, J. Finnin, WI. A. Garland, Illr. Fabrizi French Club Les membres du cercle Francais se sont bien amusees cette annee. Translationfwfhe members of the French club had a very good time this year. How? With a dance. a food sale. speakers, movies, and affiliation with other or- ganizations, at rnenas and women's colleges in the Boston area. The Follies Bergeres, the annual dance spon- sored by the club, was held on December Sth. The Lounge was decorated with travel posters, while the Council Room was turned into a Parisien cafe for the occasion. The guests. including men from all the greater-Boston colleges, danced to recorded music. The club displayed their culinary talents in a food sale. featuring French delicacies, which both the club members and their customers greatly enjoyed. The group also went to see many of the French movies which appeared in Boston. At their fre- quent meetings. they heard interesting speakers on various aspects of French culture. In addition, they had the opportunity to meet foreign students. through membership in the French Center and the International Students, Center. here in Boston, Newman Club The Newman Club is a national organization of Catholic students in nonsectarian colleges. As a member of the New England Province and the National Newman Club Federation. the Simmons group joins with M.l.T.. Holy Cross. and Boston College in outings. dances. and religious pro- grams. Beside the bi-weekly meetings held at the college. the Simmons Newman Club also at- tends a monthly Rosary and Benediction service in the Emmanuel Chapel. The Club has many social and religious func- tions throughout the year. climaxed by the Mother- Daughter Communion Breakfast in May. This year the Club went Christmas caroling at an old folkis home. held a Christmas party for orphans. sponsored an acquaintance dance. a square dance. and a ski weekend and participated in Newman Center activities. College Club dances and the Newman Forum were also attended. Father Kron served as club chaplain this year and gave slide lectures on the Mass and Church Art as well as advising club members. The Club. under his guidance. is especially interested in de- veloping the religious. cultural, and social lives of its members. C. Sheehan, D. Seibert, DI. Cavallero, P. Burke IYCF-lnter-Varsity Christian Fellowshipfis a means by which Protestant students may find an outlet for spiritual growth. An inter-denomina- tional club, it helps Fill the religious gap in the education of college students. The major Simmons IVCF event was the annual banquet in May. Following the banquet were a musical program and a speaker. Every Tuesday. IVCF has a Bible study. The most recent topic was the life of the Apostle Peter. The Boston Area IVCF missionary project was to help a newly organized IVCF group in Paris get started. The Simmons chapter raised enough money to send them a mimeographing machine. At an Area Wo1'kshop in February and March. problems of the groups in schools around Boston were discussed. A weekend conference was held in Lincoln. February 20-22. After exams in ,lune a week-long conference for the New England- New York areas was held at Camp Pinnacle, out- side Albany. N. Y. IVCF owns two island summer camps. one oft' Ontario. Canada. and the other off California. Delegates sent to them always return full of ideas. vowing it an experience theyill never forget. IVCF L. Chorlirm, DI. Hervey qi 'Ds l3'Nai Hrith Hillel meets the special needs of Jewish students at Simmons through social. edu- cational. cultural. and religious programs. lts goal is best expressed in the words of the Sage Hillel: 'LThe more knowledge, the more life. Hillel offers each student the opportunity to seek and gain that knowledge. Under the directorship of Rabbi Herman Pol- lack and his assistant, Miss Judith Alper, this year Simmons' Hillel worked in coordination with simi- lar groups at lVl.l.T. and Tufts. This made pos- sible the intercollegiate social events, like the coffee mixers, the dances. and the informal lectures. The educational program consisted of monthly meetings featuring a speaker. a film, or a panel discussion. In addition, six weekly classes were conducted by Rabbi Pollack in Hebrew, Yiddish, Basic Judaism, Contemporary Jewish Problems. and Philosophies of Religion. Funds for Israel. and organizations like the Beth lsrael Hospital. were collected in the week-long Combined Jewish Appeal drive. Simmons' Hillel collaborated with lVl.l.T. and Tufts in sponsoring programs to celebrate the Jewish holidays and festivals throughout the year. Hillel Christian Association The Christian Association presents a varied and interesting program which centers around a three- fold theme: that of working, studying, and acting. Some of the many activities include a rally to in- troduce the club to freshmen, and coffee and dough- nut hours to meet Frosh. held in the Play-Pen. There are several meetings at which various speakers and topics of interest are presented. Lille- treatu is a discussion and short devotional service at Congregational Headquarters in Framingham, followed by supper and singing. Christian Association joined the Y.W.C.A. in carrying out some pre-Christmas programs such as caroling and decorating. The Association spon- sored a series of interesting discussions entitled AA Christian Student In a Secular Wiorldfi A wonderful trip was planned to visit Cathedral Tn the Pinesw in Rindge, New Hampshire, in the spring. The 5.0.5. Committee helped the Volun- teer Service Bureau when necessary. The Simmons Christian Association held many joint activities with associations at M.T.T. and other colleges in the Boston area. One of Simmons' most popular groups, C. A. shows the kind of spirit we really like to seel B. Perlmutter, R. Zigman, B. Holland J. Lamprey, J. Fritch, ill. Bartlett, S. Shelton, E J. MacMillan ' qw. . 4 . 1. rss: .Ziff S. Dawson, A. Hochheimer, M. Schlank, J. Hartley Outing Club One of the largest and most active clubs in the college is the Outing Club. lt is a club for the out-doors enthusiasts who like having fun with others. It is for those who like to whirl at a square dance and whiz on a good pair of skis, for the ones who climb to the mountain top to get the glory of a beautiful view, and then sit dow'n to rest and sing. The enthusiasm of the Outing Club is carried over to the monthly meetings, when different trips and sports are discussed. The Simmons Outing Club belongs to what is fondly termed IOCA-the Intercollegiate Outing Club Association. Membership in this makes pos- sible many trips with Boston outing clubs during the year. Outing Clubb-ers take off for Lake George in the fall to go canoeing. In the win- ter they speed up to Conway and Stowe for a weekend of skiing. And in the spring they subway to the Charles River for an afternoon of sailing. Many O. C. er's take to the Blue Hills or to Monadnock for rock climbing or hiking. Anyone with a yen for the great outdoors may join the O. C. and is thereby assured of a won- derful time. P. f'1GCD0lIUIlI, A. Southworth, D. Livingston Fun. fellowship. and a strong social conscience guide the members of the Y.-W.C.A. Club in their bi-weekly meetings. As the campus unit of the Boston Y.YV.C.A.. the group holds meetings in the lounge, in the downtown Yi, building, and in the various social service centers where it works and entertains. A backyard party complete from hot dogs to silly games started the ball rolling in September. The October meetings featured a discussion of civil rights and McCarthyism and a tour of the HY which ended in a supper party. The annual chocolate party for the South End Settlement House children w'as held in Novem- ber. Santa Claus took over in December at the party for the children at the Nickerson Home of the S.P.C.C. and in caroling at the Home for Aged Men. A roller skating party with the Sargent College chapter of the HY started the New Year off right. And sports, discussions, parties, and monthly dances as well as the social service projects, kept the Club busy as its members experienced the joy of giving as well as receiving. YWCA Club 522 fjvln clan Poster Committee provides for Simmons Col- lege Ll convenient and inexpensive means for attrac- tive publicity. Any organization or activity may order posters from the Committee and expect rapid service in the form of an eye-catching poster-one that will almost insure the success of any function. Poster Committee is comprised of students with artistic ability who enjoy working in this medium. Candidates for the Committee must design and exe- cute a poster on a given subject. The Committee judges it, deciding whether or not it merits en- trance into Poster Committee. This year there were thirteen members. repre- senting the four classes. The faculty advisor was Lyle K. Bush of the Art Department. There were two Committee oflicers, Jacqueline Fritch, chair- man, and Shirley Butterman, treasurer. These gals, and their staff, are 9913? responsible for the fact that Poster How in Front Hall constantly attracts the attention of passers-by-enough so, so that these people stop, read and-joy of all joys- ATTEND! Congratulations are in order for P.C. for doing such excellent work with such good results. Poster Club J. Frizeh Physical Therapy Club The first meeting of the newly formed Physical Therapy Club was held November 13. At this time a charter was drawn up and oflicers elected. The Clubls purpose is to promote interest in physi- cal therapy among the student body, and member- ship is open to all physical therapy students. One meeting was planned to which all interested fresh- men were invited. The P.T. Club at Simmons gives prospective physical therapists a chance to get together, dis- cuss and learn various techniques, and to keep up- to-date on new methods and ideas. The ultimate goal of the club members is the maximum rehabili- tation and adjustment of a patient after physical or mental injury. This goal is achieved by the use of such natural agents as sunshine, water, exercise, massage, me- chanical forces, and electricity. The success of the treatment is dependent upon the individual thera- pist, her care, knowledge, and intelligent adminis- tration of prescribed medical treatment. It is sin- cerely hoped by the Club that its meetings will help its members to better achieve their goals. Ill. Wlelz, DI. Legace, S. Wilrler stu ll xtxl OT Lnfoimatiort on ow to join limit-r lenlmtttf-e note npectal content Three scripts with universal appeal , . . l THE NATIONAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION of which Simmons has been a member ' since its inception in 1947 is the largest and most representative organization of H college students in America. As a subcommittee of Stu-G. the Simmons NSA has 4 been an active participant of all NSA meetings, conferences, and activities. Al- ' though the chairman and vice-chairman are all-college elected, the functions of NSA are related to the college community. Each year NSA has extended its 1 scope of activities. lt has made students aware of local, regional, and national ZW I student problems. It has attacked discrimination of all kinds and especially infringements upon academic freedom. lt has worked for a better life for all students, Q. I and it has the plans and spirit to continue this work. THE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION integrates its activities to offer students various sports on an interclass basis. The program does not advocate competition with 4 I other colleges but does plan 'iplay daysl' and practice games with neighboring 5 3 schools. ln three years the organization has grown to include representatives from ' These ti Simmons . g . Organ: gf IQ National Students H. Oldstein, A. Hinkley, r Forum F. Walk, A. Thompson-Allen, A. Reid B. Stratton, B. Jnsack, A. Koener, M. Mellzer Droviding o port for every student. the four classes and seven chairmen of sports who manage the activities. and who are elected in the spring to work with the president. The organization also holds classes in the fall and spring in tennis, swimming, archery, and golf. Emblems are awarded to students who have compiled sullicient points based on participation rather than skill. The AA. plaque is awarded each year to the class winning the interclass competition. THE PURPOSE OF FORUM is to promote the social, political, and intellectual inter- ests of the students. lts four subcommittees: Social Relations Committee, including the Psychology Club and the Volunteer Service Bureau: U.N. Committeeg Com- mittee on Lcgislationg and Discussion Committee help focus student attention on specific issues. Forum is especially proud of its 70 volunteer workers-a num- l ber larger than that of any other college in the region. The U.N. Legislation, and Discussion groups have also contributed directly to student awareness of national and international problems. .ire the til-College cations tssociotion i l lDesmontl, B. Butcher 1 Athletic Association S. Steadler, E. Quinn, I. Freilas B. Price, C. McCann, F. Cooper, S. Dawson Remember? . . . both those physicals . . . filling out forms at registration fall of 'emj . . . long lines in the bookstore at book-buying time . . . exciting radio and TV programs during our studying . . . cramming for finals . . . that interminable wait for marks . . . last minute Slimmer Reading . . . visits to umuseums, theaters - not to mention other places . . . coffee during our 'Gspare time at Stowaway . . . our patient advisors . . . the noisy Butt Room . sleeping through classes fin the Rest Roomj . . . time out for NEWS in the lounge . . . ngetting caught- up during vacation . . . it's been trying and tiring . . . yet wonderful! The Classes These seniors llemonslrale that Up looks just ns good ns Down. No kibitzing from the pea- nut galleries -a Butt-Room by-law. Sophs take their voting right and duty seriously and will- ingly. Freshmen stop for a minute to rest and chat in the Lounge. if 'MQ aww? ,4 '1 WA YI S 'Z E IDBURISTSIQ Simmons' fiftieth Freshmon Closs D. Cooper, D. Joseph, S. Robbins, JI. Lovin Freshman year at Simmons is a period of 'Glearning the ropes. Those living at the Dorms get to know their roommates, become used to stand- ing in lines, walking to school, and learn a few rules and regulations. Commuters study bus and train schedules trying to find the shortest line to and from. WCdl1ESd3j7 orientation periods intro- duce Freshman to Simmons, organizations, clubs, honor system, nine schools, how to study-and oh, so much! But, if things get too rough, there are always the Junior Sisters to turn to. During spare time, we get acquainted with the sights around Boston lespecially such places as lVl.I.T., Harvard and Tuftsl. We feel so grown up when the professors call us uMiss and treat us as adults. Who can forget Freshman Formal, and distribut- ing May baskets early in the morning? We start Freshman year-a bit scared-but finish with a feeling of confidence. KWSN Hack again, Sophomores noisily greet the fami- liar faces of friends they made during their hrst year at Simmons. ltis a little embarrassing at lirst not to place faces and names together-but then. everyone's in the same boat. We are particularly happy that there is no physical training ordeal to undergo this year-and smile when we see the l7reshmen adorned in the Wfright and Ditson spe- cials. Courses seem much more interesting this year he-cause. basically at least. theyire of our own choice. And, we really feel like intellectuals with all our courses in Psychology. Sociology. Eco- nomics, etc. We also have a chance to experiment in art and music. How proud we are when we get our rings at the Sophomore Luncheon. Then. the big night arrives-our Soph Shufde-when we can invite the beau of the moment to share an eve- ning with our friends. We leave this year with a sigh that we've reached the half-way mark. 1 f 1.-..4, , 4 1 ,J -. 4-.44 1 HI. lI.. 'llg0lL, B. liIl'lllll'Q', J. W'ray, C, Quinn 3 The Sophomores-sister class of '53 we ff 2 aw. w ., R rv ff-v X I. fBeizerj Cohen, E. Duval, A. Sioras. A. Sands The Junior Welcome Committee opens the col- lege's events by guiding the rather bewildered Freshmen, during the first week of orientation. The rest of the Junior Class also chimes in getting ac- quainted with their Freshman Sisters and often taking them out to dinner. Early in the year these two classes get together for an afternoon of fun at the Bib Party which is highlighted by a race for autographs. Junior Prom-the dinner-party-dance -arrives in a whirl of fun that will long be an important memory. Junior year means we say good-bye to the five-year nurses who enter a rugged but worth-while two-year hospital training course. The spring is also important to the Juniors as we join with the Seniors at graduation. We partici- pate in the beautiful Daisy Chain ceremony, then lend a helping hand by ushering at Baccalaureate and Commencement exercises. Juniors all-we're big girls now 'se The Class of '53-Seniors of lost As Dorothy Parker would say, '6Well, Here We Arew-at the end of four years which, once, we could have sworn would never end and now we wish had not gone quite so fast. Four years of college, from timid freshmen to philosophic seniors with, we hope, a mature outlook on the life ahead of us. We have griped-what class doesnit. But we've had friends to gripe to, friends we'll alw'ays keep. We've learned and learned, some of the knowledge from classes, the l6St, just from being at college and possessing an open mind. We can get along with people-all kinds. We have laughed, cried, fallen in love and back out again, hoped, despaired, won and lost- through it all, learned that it's dangerous to ra- tionalize. And so, with confidence mixed with just a dash of scared suspense, we stand on the brink of a future for which Simmons has prepared us-the Class of 1953. Q :S E. Burr, M. Downey, F. MacDonald., M. Cowles Spotlight on Seniors Decked in cap and' gown for our last year . . . Senior-Frosh mixer . . . hilarious fun at the Hobo Party . . . Christmas holidays-engagements . . . new traditions . . . Alice in Wonderland . . . soft lights at Senior Prom . . . the Senior-Faculty sup- per . . . happy, yet thoughtful, faces at Step-sing- ing . . . the long-anticipated field work trips . . . May Day with the fragrance of gardenias . . . a feast of strawberries . . . talks from the placement oiiice . . . letters and interviews . . . final exams . . . our walk through the Daisy Chain . . . a last gay fling with classmates at Class Day Dance . . . Graduation day . . . diplomas and honors . . . mem- ories of four wonderful years. If X, X V1 X SET mm 's fr M515 II L, i 7s52'eE '5f A :- Taking over leading roles in 0 real The orderly accession of one senior class after another to the fourth year role of leadership and responsibility is achieved through one of Simmons, oldest and prettiest June traditions. During the daisy chain ceremony, the retiring senior class president presents her cap and gown to the incom- ing senior president as a symbol of her ascendency to olhce. The whole ceremony properly starts with the fashioning and carrying of the daisy chain hy the juniors who then march with their senior sisters to the colonnade. Here the seniors take the steps twhere they have stood many times before dur- ing step-singingi and sing their farewell serenade to classmates and friends. After the transference of the cap and gown, the fife producfion C? singing seniors give the steps to the juniors who claim them as the Nnew senior class. Thus the chain continues unbroken year after year. Louanne Marie Adams 1202 West Henley Street Olean, New York Science. Ellen Richards 2, 3, 43 Newman Club 1, 2g Riding Club 13 Junior Welcome Com- mittee 33 House Senior 43 As- sistant Fire Captain of Campus 43 Spring Spree 3. Nancy Joy Arms 64 Sagamore Road Bronxville, New York Prince. Sock and Buskin 1, 2, Treasurer, Assistant Production Manager 33 House Chairman 13 Soph Shuffle 23 May Day Break- fast 23 Senior Banquet 23 Junior Welcome Committee 33 Junior Prom 33 Olde English Dinner 33 Freshman-Junior .lamboree 33 Book Store Committee 3: Prince Club. Barbara Ann Baker 67 Granite Place Milton Barb Business. Poster Committee 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 3g Sock and Buskin 3, 4, Publicity Committee Coa chairman 3. Mary Elizabeth Bartlett 9 Grove Street Essex, Connecticut Science. Glee Club 13 Ellen Richards 2, 3, 4g Christian As- sociation President 3, 43 Modern Dance Club 1, 2, Vice-President 33 Outing Club 43 House Chair- man 43 Junior Welcome Com- mittee 33 Dorm Council 4. Kathryn Ann Bayer 755 Clifton Avenue Newark, N. J. Kay Home Economics. Glee C1ub li Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4. is .f r X, .,. K Althea Ann Andersen CMrs.D 12 Haviland Street Boston 1 Fifi Library Science. Transferred from San Mateo Junior College 33 020 Club 4. Martha Bailey 3 Wildwood Terrace Winchester Midge Home Economics. Sock and Buskin lg Y.W.C'.A. 2, 3, 43 Publicity Chairman 33 Home Economics Club 23 State Rep- resentative 3, 43 Massachusetts State Home Economics College Club Program Chairman and State Representative 43 Spring Spree 23 Home Economics Fash- ion Show 2, 3, 4. Elizabeth Anne Baldwin 28 Beacon Street Fitchburg Betsy Preprofessionalf Y.W.C.A. lg Outing Club 2g Exec. Board 33 O20 Club 33 Bookstore Commit- tee 23 Daisy Chain 33 Class Day 33 President's Reception 33 Commencement Monitor 33 Bac- calaureate 33 College Voucher 43 Transfer Committee 43 News Special Writer 3, .I 4, Circulation Staff 43 Bluettes 2, 3, 43 Fire Captain 33 Olde English Dinner 33 MIC Library Staff 4. ,Joan Battis 21 Sherman Street Wollaston Business. Junior Welcome Com- mittee 33 News 1, 2, 3, 4. Ann Beckwith 9 Chelsea Lane W. Hartford, Conn. Preprofessional. Sara Joan Bcdini Saw Mill Hill llllflll Ridgetieltl, Conn. lgiifll-I1 k Science lP.T.I. Ellen Richards 2, Sec.-Treas. 3g Sock and Bus- kin 1, 2, 3: Newman Club l, 2, 3g Spring Spree 1, 2, 3, Compels Committee 1, 2, 3: Class Exec. Board 2g Class Secretary 33 Honor Board 41g House Senior 43 Nurses' Party Chairman 33 Olde English Dinner 3: P.T. Club il-. Patricia Mary Behre l3l Passaic Street New Providence, N. .l. Pat Publication. Marilyn Virginia Belcher 6 Hackensack Circle Chestnut Hill Belchie Business. Marilyn Catherine Bellini 19 Central Street Somerville Mal Nursing. Newman Club l, 2, 33 Anne Strong 2, 3, 45 Athletic Association 3, Fund Drive 3g .lunior Prom Committee 3: Basketball l, 2, Captain 3g Soft- ball l, 2, Manager 3g Class Exec. Board 3. Shirley Mae Bender 18 Pomfret Street Hartford, Conn. Sh irl Preprofessional. Outing Club lg Athletic Association Sophomore Representative 23 News 2g For- um Secretary 3g Stu-G Repre- sentative 4g Spring Spreeg Sports Tournamentsg Mic Pho- tography Editor 3. Eflith Beer 821 Central Avenue Woodmere, Long Island, N. Y. Prince. Hillel l, 2, 33 Y.W.C.A. lg Outing Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Prince Club 3, 4-3 Sock and Bus- kin 41, Ski Director 35 Spring Spree 1, 2, 3, 4, Masquerade Ball 3. Eugenia Demitria Bekas 6 Soztthview Street Dorchester Cena Nursing. Carol Jean Belejack 239 Parker Avenue Meriden, Conn. Preprofessional. Transferred from Albertus Magnus College 3, Newman 3, Senior Delegate 4g Chairman of Social Relations Committee of Forum 45 N.S.A. Senior Class Delegate 4-. Marion Drake Bemis 378 Ray Street Manchester, N. H. Nursing lV. Graduate Nurses Club 4. Elizabeth Ann Bertrand 23 North Main Street North Grafton Betty Prince. Glee Club lg Prince Club 3, 4-g Newman Clubg Junior Welcome Committee 33 .lunior Prom Committee 3. rnqwguy b ' A ' ' A'-.V 1' ' V' 12, .-'Zin '.' ,js-'.-5: '-:J - - ..- ,- ..f 1 . Q . - .- V . ' Q15 . 11 , W l 4 dbg' ' - and U W- ,wgain :Ea ,,,:fE:a:., ,, .in 1, R Marcia Bianchi 30 Ellington Road Wollaston Business. News 1, 2, 3, 4, Sock and Buskin 3, Christian Science 1, Forum 3. Nancy Billings 435 Main Street Acton Home Economics. Outing Club 1, 2, Home Economics Club 2, 3, Secretary 4, Academy 3, 4, Class Treasurer 4. Jane Carol Black R. D. 1 Salem Depot, N. H. Polly Preprofessional. Returned to Simmons after one year at Bates College 4, Modern Dance 1, 2, 4, Outing Club 1, 2, 4, Christian Science Club 1, 2, 4, Volunteer Service 4. Rita Lois Blinder 55 Pershing Avenue Elizabeth, N. J. Reet Business. Transferred from Uni- versity of Vermont 3, Clee Club 3, Hillel 3, Junior-Frosh .lam- boree 3, Bluettes Accompanist 4, Assistant Chairman of Trans- fer Committee 4. Sandra Freda Bogin 174 Grove Street Charleston, S. C. Sandy Prince. Transferred from Uni- versity of Georgia 3, Prince Club 3, 4. Claire Barbara Biederman 146 Kilsyth Road . Brookline Business. Barbara Ann Birdsey 30 Woodside Circle Middletown, Conn. Byrd Prince. Outing Club l, Sock and Buskin 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 1, 2, Song Leader 2, 3, Class Exec. Board 2, Soph Luncheon 2, Valentine Party 2, Compets 3, Chairman of Spring uSpree Dance 3, Chairman of Carolers at Olde English Din- ner 3, Chairman of Social Ac- tivities 4, Dorm Council 4, Chairman of 1.C.C. 4, Prince Club 4, Stu-G Formal 4. Dorcas Kelsey Blaich F ryebgurg, Maine Business. Outing Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Fire Chief 4. Hannah Bloom 137 Glenway Street Dorchester H oney Preprofessional. Class Exec. Board 1, Sophomore Commuter Representative to Stu-G 2, Chairman of Christmas Formal 2, Chairman of DP Fund 3, Fiftieth Anniversary Celebra- tion 4, N.S.A. Assistant Chair- man 3, Chairman 4, Delegate to National Student' Congresses 3, 4. Joan Carolyn Bradley 18 Salem Place Malden Library Science. 020 Club 3, 4, Academy 3, 4. llarbura Joan Brady 28 Slllllllffl' Slft't'l Taunton Harb Library Science. Newman Club l, 2: Y.W.C.A. 2: Junior Wel- come Committee 35 020 Club 3, 41g MIC Circulation Stall 4. Barbara Ann Brown Eastern Point, Gloucester Science. Transferred from Pembroke College 33 Outing Club 3, 4-g Captain of Sailing 3, Ellen Richards 4-Q Anne Strong Club 3g Academy 4. Audrey Leah Bryant 61 Highland Avenue Newtonville Dree Library Science. Pan-American Club lg Christian Science Or- gamization Sec.-Treas. 1, 2, President 3, Reader 4-3 020 Club 4-g French Club 3. Eleanor Burr 72 Summer Street Kennebunk, Maine Ellie Home Economics. Clee Club lg Home Economics Club 2, 3, President 4-g House Chairman lg Class Exec. Board 2g Sophomore Prom Committee 2g Olde Eng- lish Dinner 3g Junior Prom 3g Class Secretary 4-g Spring Spree 2, 3, 4-g Waitress 2, 33 Graduate Assistant 4. Tina Mary Calzolari 73 Court Street Augusta, Maine Business. Newman Club l, 2g News Assistant Technical Edi- tor 3, Technical Editor 4-g Junior Welcome Committee 3. Ruth Pollcr Brooks 116 Appleton Street Saugus Nursing. Y.W.C.A. 2. 33 Anne Strong 2, 3, 43 Junior Welcome Committee 3. Joyce Brownley 56 School Street Melrose Science. Ellen Richards 2, 3, 4-: Sock and Buskin l, 2, 3, 4-g Outing Club l, 4-g Christian As- sociation 4-g Freshman Prom Committee lg Spring Spree l, 2, 3, 43 Junior Prom Committee 35 Bib Party Committee 3: 50th Anniversary Celebration 4. Ellen Norma Budge 6 Highfield Road Hingham Budget Nursing. Anne Strong Club 2. 3g Junior Prom Committee 33 Bib Party Committee 3. Ruth Ann Callahan 408 Stevens Street Lowell Cal Nursing IV. Graduated from St. .lohn's Hospital, Lowellg New- man Club 4-3 Registered Nurses' Club 4g Riding 3. Margaret Erika Carlson 630 Hammond Street Chestnut Hill Peggy Prince. Newman Club 1, 23 Prince Club 3, 45 Class Exec. Board 4-g Sophomore Prom 2. :MV V. . V , V ,V k J - .. ..-ant-.Lat .-... . . ... , - ... te..---Me -L aww--.-mal-kSa:aa..:n -x m--fkwe'..- 1'--We-I'-'-:M : '-- 1' 1' - -4 ' 4 f' sn. mnrmwwewnnqwmmmlmvm-nwfemuanuw -....,-ut 9. mum! 4 'sem Anne Carlough 4 Old Hickory Drive Albany, N. Y. Prince. Clee Club lg Prince Club 3, 43 House Chairman L, 2, 43 Dorm Council l, 2g Dorm Board 43 Entertainment Night Chairman lg Class Yice-Presi- dent 23 Class President 23 Bib Party Chairman 33 Freshman Prom Committee lg Junior Prom Committee 33 Bluettes 2, Manager 3. 43 Assistant Chair- man Transfer Committee 4. Barbara Rodgers Caseau CMrs.D 285 Harvard Street Cambridge Home Economics. Student lnvi- tation Days 2, 33 Home Eco- nomics Club 3, 43 MIC Technical Stali' 4. Barbara Anne Chellis 26 Unicorn. Avenue Weymouth Heights Publication. l.V.C.F. 2, 33 Stu- dent lnvitation Days, 2, 33 Sim- mons Review Staff 43 Sopho- more Representative to NSA3 Transfer Welcome Committee 3. Aldene Ellen Coakley 26 Andrea' Street Everett Preprofessional. Sock and Bus- kin 1, 2, 3, 43 Social Relations Committee of Forum 3, 43 New- man Club l, 2, 3, 4g Compets l, 2, 3, Director 4. Ethel Margaret Colby 57 Norfolk Street Weymouth Library Science. 020 Club 3, 4g l.V.C.F. 2, 3g Academy 3, 4. ie, 53 , . L, 5 x . 1 ff! Mary Gene Carter 23 Trowbridge Avenue Newtonville Gene Publication. Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 43 Outing Club 13 Modern Dance l. 2. 3. 43 Costume Chair- man 23 C-lee Club l, 2, 33 News l. Tea Chairman 2, Managing Editor 3, 43 MIC Staff 43 Co- chairman Publication Open House 3. Marianne Therese Cassie 54 Cedar Street Everett Science. Ellen Richards Club 2, 3, 43 Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Junior Welcome Committee 33 Academy 3, 43 Sock and Buskin l, 2. Jean Mayer Church 716 Northern Parkway Baltimore, Md. Library Science.. Glee Club l, 23 House Chairman 3g Dorm Board 3g House Senior 4. Lucille Johanna Cofman 121 Summer Street Fitchburg Babsy Home Economics. Outing Club 13 Hillel 1, 2g Modern Dance Club 2, 33 Forum Tea Chair- man 2g Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 33 N.S.A. Alternate Delegate 3, Tea Chair- man 3g House Chairman 13 Co- chaiiman Soph Luncheon 23 Chairman Junior Welcome Com- mittee 33 Home Economics Cur- riculum Co-chairman 2, 3, 43 President of Stu-G 4. Dorothy Margaret Coutanche 72 John Street E. Providence, R. I. Dottie Libraly Science. 020 Club 4-. Mary Lois Cowles Deerfield Bimpy Business. Song Leader 4, Blu- uettes 3, 4. Nancy Elizabeth Dee 39 Hurlcroft Road Milton Business. Newman Club 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 3, Sec.-Treas. fl, Class Exec. Board 4. Mary Helen Deuchler Lyons, New York Dyke Business. Junior Welcome Com- mittee 3. Natalie De Witt cfo C. H. De Witt Western Print. and Litho. Co. 630 Fifth Avenue New York, N. Y. Publication. Glee Club 1, Pub- licity Assistant 4, Outing Club 1, 3, 4, Poster Committee 2, 3, 4, I.V.C.F. 1, 2, 3, 4, Treas. 3. Virginia Frances Dey Cranbury, N. J. Ginny Business. Outing Club 1, 2, Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, Stu-G Assistant Treas. 3, Treasurer 4. Nancy Elaine Crerie ll Richard Road Lexington Nance Library Science. Y.W.C.A. Vice' President 3, 020 Club 3, 4, So- cial Relations Exec. Board 3, MIC 4, Class Exec. Board 1, Curriculum Chairman 4, Com- muter Representative to Stu-G 4. Mary Jo De Roma 40 Front Street Walpole Jody Nursing. Newman Club, Anne Strong Club 2, Treas. 3, Outing Club, Clee Club, Social Chair- man of Soplt. House. Ruth Ellen De V01 12 John Street Glens Falls, N. Y. Nursing. Transferred from Skid- more College 2, Anne Strong Club 2, 3, 4, Outing Club 2. Natalie Janet De Wolfe 73 Prescott Street Reading Prince. Eleanor Ruth Doane 4 Doane Avenue Needham Ellie Nursing. Anne Strong 2, 3, 4, Y.W.C.A. 2, Cabinet Member 3, Outing Club 3, Student 1n- vitation Days 2, 3. Mary Margaret Downey 80 Huntington Road Milton Peg Publication. Newman Club 1, 2. 3, 4, Outing Club 2, 3, 4: Athletic Association President 3, Class Secretary 2, Class Vice- President 4, Mic 4. Gladys Ruth Eastman 60 Prospect Street Bernardsville, N. .l. Ruth Nursing. Eleanor Patricia English 5 Locust Street Amesbury Science. Transferred from Col- lege of William and Mary 2, Ellen Richards Club 2, Outing Club 3, 4, Y.W.C.A. 2, Basket- ball 2, Chairman of Program Series 4, Chairman of Invita- tions and Announcements 4. Marie Fantony Fayville Science. Ellen Richards Club 2, 3, Exec. Board 4, Mic Tech- nical Staif 4. Jean Faulkner 25 Hodges Street Attleboro Library Science. 020 Club 3, 4, Outing Club lg MIC Techni- cal Staff 4. Patricia Fairbanks Doyle 51 Chatham Street . Lynn Pat Nursing. Anne Strong Club 2, 3, Outing Club 1, 2, Secretary 3, Christian Association 3, l.V.C.F. 2, Class Exec. Board 3. Ethel Mildred Elbein 6 Howland Terrace Worcester Home Economics. IZFA 1, Hillel 1, 2, 3, 4, Home Eco- nomics Club 2, 3, 4, Spring Spree 2, 3, Olde English Din- ner 3, Fund Drive 4, Transfer Welcome Committee 4. Nancy Louise Evans Landfall, Kittery Point, Maine Nan Home Economics. l.V.C.F. 2, Tea Chairman 3, Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4, Committee for So- cial Functions 2, 3, Class Exec. Board 4, Curriculum Repre- sentative 1, 2, 3, Fire Captain 3, Commencement 3, Junior Welcome Committee 3. Janet Claire Ferroli I0 Hamilton Street Dorchester Jan Home Economics. Jacqueline Klein Fink CMrs.J 201 South West Street Allentown, Pa. Jackie Publication-Museum Program. Hillel 1, Art Director, Review 3, Art Director of MIC 4. Carole Joan Finkel 76 Harvard Street Chelsea Science lP.T.l. Hillel 1, 2, 3, 4-5 Ellen Richards 2, 3g Physi' cal Therapy Club 443 Junior Prom Committee 3g Junior Wel- come Committee 3. Fay Carolyn Fisk 16 Eddywood Street Springfield Prince. Prince Club 3, 4-. Ruth Ann Foley 50 Princeton Road Arlington Nursing. Newman Club 1, 3, Anne Strong 2, 3, 4-g Social Ac- tivities Representative lg Prom Committees 1, 3g Prom Co- chairman 2. Joanne Cecelia Gaifney 185 Maple Street Danvers Gay? Preprofessional. Newman Clubg Glee Club 1, 2. Cornelia Joanne Gajeski Pulaski, Wis. Connie Prince. Catherine Theresa Fish 55 Hllbarn Street Roslindale Cathy Business. Newman Club l, 2, 3, 44 Y.W.C.A. 2, 3, 4. Jane Denise Fitzgerald 112 Bay State Road Boston Fitzy Home Economics. Newman Club l, 2, 3, 43 Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4-. Jacqueline Kay Freedman 723 East 27th Street Brooklyn, N. Y. .lackee Prince. Hillel 1g Prince Club 3, 4-9 May Day Breakfast: .lunior Prom Committee 33 Bib Party Committee, Soph Luncheon 2. Pauline Cecile Gagne State Road N. Westport, Conn. Prince. Mildred Helen Gallagher 215 Mystic Street Arlington Millie Business. Y.W.C'.A. l, Cabinet 2, 3, 43 Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Outing Club 3, 4-g Glee Club 2, 3, 4, Riding Club 3g News Business Staff 3, 4-g U.N. Com- mittee of Forum 3: MIC Adver- tising Staff 4. Marlla Garnnlell 22 Riflgebrook Drive West Hartford, Conn. Prince. Sock and Buskin 1, 2: Junior Welcome Committee 3, Olde English Dinner 3, News Technical Staff 3, 4-. Rosalyn Diana Caroyan 32 George Street Belmont Dickie Prince. Prom Committee 1, 2, 3, Food Fair 1, 2, Fund Drive 1, May Day Breakfast 2, Spring Spree 2, 3, Valentine Party 2, Junior-Frosh Jamboree 3, Prince Club 3, 4. Phyllis Ethel Gates 22 Boynton Street Jamaica Plain Science fP.T.l. Glee Club 1, 2, 3, Modern Dance Club 2, 3, Secretary 4, Ellen Richards 3, Physical Therapy Club 4, Phys- ical Therapy Representative on Student Invitation Days. Charlotte Shriber Cettes ClVIrs.D 82 Jersey Street Boston Prince. Hillel 1, 2, 3, Outing Club 3, Prince Club 3, 4. Felice June Gillman 5 Royden Road New Haven, Conn. Prince. f 'Y' Jax Patricia Margaret Gannon 202 Richbell Road Mamaroneck, N. Y. Part Publication. Freshman Prom Committee 1, May Day Break- fast 2, Junior Prom Committee 3, Prince Club 3, Fund Drive 4, MIC Photography Editor 4-. Dolores Faye Carston 7 Limzard Road W. Hartford, Conn. Prince. Camille Ann Gervais 64 Blossom Street Nashua, N. H. Library Science. House Chair- man 3, Daisy Chain 3, Acade- my 4-. Mary Birdsall Gibbs 24 Beech Road New Rochelle, N. Y. Science CP.T.l. P.T. Club 4. Betty Louisa Gilmour 4543 Brown Street Union City, N. .l. Prince. Riding Club 1, Prince Club 3, 4-g Academy 3, 4-. Annu Harry Gogos 438 Huntington Avenue Boston Prince. Orthodox Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Valentine Party 2g Junior Welcome Committee 3g Prince Club 3, 49 Fund Drive 4. Dorothy Norma Goldberg 37 Evelyn Street Mattapan Dot Home Economics. Hillel 1, 2, 35 Home Economics Club 2, 3, Treas. 4g Academy 3, Treas. 45 May Banquet Chairman 3g Fnotl Fair Chairman 35 Senior-Fad ulty Supper Chairman 4. Anita Marsh Granoff CMrs.J 26 Park Vale Avenue Allston Nickie Prince. Glee Club lg News 3g Junior Welcome Committee 3g Dorm Council 3. Cynthia Elaine Gubernick 6 Grove Avenue Sharon Ceg Publications. Riding Club 1, 25 Le Cercle Francais 15 Out- ing Club 2g Hillel 1, 2, 3g News Associate Managing Editor 2, 3, Editor 3, 4g Spring Spree 1, 2g Commencement 2. Beverly Elliott Hadley CMrs.D Phillipston Road Petersham Bev Business. Y.W.C.A. 13 Outing Club 1. af-egt e :.f:.-ev-s':..w1f-ff fi-sz' . ff . .f V 4vm4-vt-w- 2, . 46-:vw-t.f..aSf-e1-:---1. .1 .. 'eg' ffm 5 gee tx ng Q-1 , , AQ ti A1 Or gg? 'N W e Q J, 4 - ft we A :ff ge. Arlene Gloria Goldberg .35 Garland Road Newton Centre Arl Business. Transferred from West- brook Junior College 3g Hillel 4. . ,rj 3. M' f' ., .- ' ,,,, ' 133 Gardner Road Barbara Gordon Brookline Preprofessional. Jean Manchester Griffin 8 Hancock Street Abington Home Economics. Transferred from University of New Hamp- shire 3g Home Economics Club 3, 4g Y.W.C.A. 3, Exec. Board 4g News 35 MIC Literary Stafl 4g Daisy Chain 3g Commence- ment 34 Transfer Welcome Com- mittee 4. Ann Hackney 20 Maple Avenue Larchmont, N. Y. Geri Prince. Transferred from St. Lawrence University 4g Modern Dance Club 4g Newman Club 4: Outing Club 43 Community Sailing 45 Prince Club 4. Marion Margaret Haier 5 Shawnee Gardens Tuckahoe, N. Y. Prince. Priscilla Hale 44 High Street Stoneham Pris Publication. Christian Science 1, 2, 3, 4, Mic Editor 4. Dorothy Francis Halloran 78 Waverly Avenue Newton Dottie Home Economics. Glee Club 1, Home Economics Club 2. 3, Pro- gram Chairman 4, Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 4, Soph Luncheon 2, Class Exec. Board 3, Bib Party 3, Transfer Welcome Commit- tee 3, 4, Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4. Mary Eldean Harrigan 12 Alden Avenue Revere Preprofessional. Sock and Bus' kin 1, Riding Club 2, Newman Club 1, Secretary 2, Vice-Presb dent 3, Chairman New England Province 4, Class President 1, Freshman Prom 1, N.S.A. Food Fair 2, Spring Spree 2, 3, In- vitation Day Hostess 2, 3, Class Exec. Board 3, A.A. Swimming Chairman 3, Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration 4. Monica M. Harrington 140 Magazine Street Cambridge Bunny Library Science. Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Junior Prom 3, Daisy Chain 3, O20 Club 3, 4: Y.W.C.A. 3. Virginia Grace Healy 185 Berkshire Road Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Ginny Prince. Chairman Soph Lunch- eon 2, Soph ShuHle 2, Valentine Party 2, May Breakfast 2, Spring Spree 2, 3, Prince Club 3, 4, 4Poster Committee l, 2, 3, Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Class Vice-President 3, Daisy Chain Chairman 3, Bib Party 3, Junior Prom 3, Assistant House Chair- man 3, Olde English Dinner 3, Stu-G Publicity Chairman 3, House Senior 4, Senior Prom 4, Mic 4. R Prudence Lang Hall Main Road 1 Falmouth Prue Science fP.T.l. Stu-G 1, 2, Chairman May Day Party 2, Co- chairman Curriculum Committee 2, Olde English Dinner 3, Bib Party 3, Daisy Chain 3, Honor Board 3, Co-chairman Spring Spree 3, House Senior 4, P.T. Club 4. Dorothy Ann Hardy 16 Wooclchester Drive Milton Nursing. Anne Strong 2, 3, Glee Club 3. Mary Elizabeth Harrington 52 Florence Avenue Lowell Business. Freshman Prom 1, Soph l..uncheon.2, Soph Shuffle 2, News 3, Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Transfer Welcome Com- mittee 3, Daisy Chain 3, Bac- calaureate 3, Bluettes 3, 4, MIC Advertising Manager 4. Jane Evans Hartwell 389 Ogden Avenue West Englewood, N. J. Publication. Mary Elizabeth Heckman 151 Washington Street Gloucester Library Science. Transferred from Regis College 2, Newman Club 2, 3, 4, 020 Club 3, 4, Volunteer Service 3, 4, Class Exec. Board 4. Mary Ellenor Higbec 34 High Street Proctor, Vermont Home Economics. Home Eco- nomics Club l, 2, 3, 45 Fire Cap- tain 4. Alice Hochheimer Ridge Farms Road Norwalk, Conn. Preprofessional. Glee Club 25 Volunteer Service 1, 2, 35 Honor Board 25 Junior Welcome Com- mittee 35 Outing Club 2, Treas- urer 3, President 4. Virginia van der Voort Huppi CMrsJ Westbrook, Maine C inny Science. Y.W.C.A. lg Ellen Richards 2, 3, 4. QU' . iw-45 Y? - ff , my 1 -- rve' f , ,ik 5. FN 1. W - sf R Joan Inez Hutchins 152 First Street Englewood, N. J. Prince. Juanita May Jackson 14 Woodbine Street Roxbury Nita Science. Ellen Richards 3, 45 Delegate to Intercollegiate Chem- ical Society 3, 45 Christian Sci- ence Organization l, 2, 3, 45 Glee Club 45 Student Invita- tion Day 25 Class Exec. Board 3, 45 Academy 3, Sec. 4. , V X ff'2.f5cX..f- .... N Y 'P M. -M a9x...., - 4 ,ff ,H ,m 2 gf vs, ,fr X,- vw 4 fix 57 A v Yr gi, 4 M X x,, 42 QQ 5, rw 3' ' ' ff 1, ,gt Kit-, W? 1 , , , cz as A .X r Q af ig, ' Eff K f f X 2 y 4 w sb 4 a 1- ws s -Q - ---- - , ,x- , 'S iff' fi Mary Winifred Higgins 300 Mystic Valley Pkwy. Arlington Home Economics. Sock and Bus- kin 15 Home Economics Club 2, 3, 45 Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Chairman of Fund Drive 4. Sarah Hodgman 37 Lakehill Road Ballston Lake, New York Preprofessional. Honor Board 45 House Senior 4. Caroline Louise Hurd Somers, Conn. 'Carol Preprofessional. Y.W.C.A. l, 2, 3, Secretary 25 Social Relations Committee l, 2, 3, 45 N.S.A. Junior Representative 35 Junior Welcome Committee 35 Dorm Board 35 Vice-President Stu-G 4. Mary Jane Irvine 7 Hickory Lane Belmont Rusty Library Science. Modern Dance Club 1, 2, 3, President 45 020 Club 4. Barbara Francis Jasak 298 Morain Street Brockton Bobbie Publication. Newman Club l, 25 Outing Club 15 Forum Vice- President 3, President 45 l.C.C. Sec.-Treas. 45 House Chair- man 25 Dorm Board 25 News 35 Commencement 35 Olde English Dinner 3. Jeri Jaxon 343 Walden Street Cambridge Preprofessional. Soph Lunch- eon 25 Student Invitation Day 25 .lunior Welcome Committee 35 College Series Program Com- mittee 35 Olde English Dinner 35 Senior-Faculty Supper 3: Daisy Chain 35 Garden Party 35 Baccalaureate ' 35 Commence- ment 35 Senior Luncheon 3. Barbara Louise Kapp 37 Wellington Avenue Haverhill Bobby Business. Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 45 Hillel 1, 2. Mary Lou Kenney 3 North Randolph Avenue Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Business. Newman 1, 3, 45 Academy 3, 4-5 Soph Shuffle 25 Junior Welcome Committee 35 Junior Prom 35 Frosh-Junior Jamboree 35 Spring Spree 1, 35 Summer Reading Committee 3. Adele Kittredge 61 Somerset Street Springfield Business. Patricia Young Kraszeski CMrs.J 131 Park Drive Boston Pat Science fP.T.P. Ellen Richards 2, 35 P.T. Club 45 Outing Club 15 Newman Club 4. Miriam Kagan 15a Tremont Street Cambridge Mike Library Science. Hillel 1, 2, 3, 45 Fund Drive 4-. Mary Luella Kellogg 48 Orchard Lane Glastonbury, Conn. Mary Lou Nursing. Anne Strong 2, 3, 4-, Vice-President 35 Delegate to Massachusetts State Council of Student Nurses 35 Sock and Buskin 1, 2, 35 Christian Asso- ciation 35 Outing Club 25 May Day Breakfast 25 Frosh-Junior Jamboree 35 Baccalaureate 35 Transfer Committee 35 Student Invitation Day 3. Joan Hawthorne King 57 Meadowbrook Road West Hartford, Conn. Fritzi Preprofessional. Soph Shuiiie 25 Sock and Buskin 35 Spring Spree 35 Representative to So- cial Activities 4-. Jean Lois Knight 2 Laurel Place Tuckahoe, N. Y. Prince. Fire Captain 15 Prince Club 3, 45 Junior Welcome Com- mittee 35 Assistant House Chairman 35 House Chairman man 45 Secretary of Dorm Board 4. Faith Eleanore Larson High Street Collinsville, Conn. Home Economics. Home Eco- nomics Ciub 2, 3, 4. Junnine Louise Laurence 570 Wyndham. Road Teaneck, N. .l. Business. Riding Club 1, Olde English Dinner 3g May Day Breakfast 2g Junior Prom 33 Assistant Secretary of Stu-G fl. Catherine Marie Le Blanc 71 Pleasant Street Wakefield Cathy Science. Glee Club Accompanist 2, 3, 4, Ellen Richards 2, 3, 4g MIC Technical Staff 4. ,Ioan Grace Lerner 110 High Street Catskill, N. Y. Preprofessional. Ann Virginia Lord 11 Avalon Place Wethersfield, Conn. Prince. Newman Club 1, 2, 4-g Prince Club 3, President 4-3 Class Exec. Board 13 Spring Spree 3g House Senior 43 I.C.C. 4g Cap and Gown Chairman 4. Audry Winslow Lovell Lowell Road Littleton Nursing. Anne Strong 2, 3, 4, Secretary 35 Freshman Prom Programs 15 Sock and Buskin 2g Outing Club 3. Annette Catherine Leaf 6414 Old Washington Road Elkridge, Md. Nursing IV. June Martha Leonard 28 Powellton Road Dorchester Home Economics. Transferred from University of Massachu- setts 3g Home Economics Club 3, 4g Hillel 3, 43 Spring Spree 3, 4g Student Invitation Day 33 Frosh-Junior Jamboree 3g Frosh- Senior Mixer 44 Transfer Wel- come Committee 4-Q Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration 4g Christmas Formal 4g Forum 3, 4. Doris Ellen Livingston 56 Gilbert Road Belmont Dorie Home Economics. l.V.C.F. lg Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4: Outing Club 4, Y.W.C.A. Re- freshment Chairman 3, Vice- President 4, Baccalaureate 33 Presidenfs Reception 35 Daisy Chain 3, Monitor at Commence- ment 35 Bib Party 3. Janice Packard Loring 64 Evergreen Street Kingston fan. Home Economics. Sock and Buskin lg Compets 15 Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4, Treas- urer 3, Junior Welcome Com- mittee 3g Transfer Committee 4. Edythe Ann MacBeth 20 Lurton. Street Quincy Edie Home Economics. I.V.C.F. 1, 2, Prayer Secretary 3, Secretary 49 Y.W.C.A. 3g Home Economics Club 3, 4. ... W -..Y t,,.-... --i:-,,.,,.....-.....m.,,,,m.,,mg,-,.....,.-..., T., - L2-.-:1,.L,,,,.,m ---E: Florence E. MacDonald 8 Henry Street Claremont, N. H. Flo Prince. Prince Club 3, 4, House Chairman 1, 2, 3, Dorm Coun- cil 1, 2, 3, l.C.C. 4, Soph Lunch- eon 2, Junior Welcome Com- mittee 3, Fund Drive Repre- sentative 3, Chai1'man-Invita- tion Days 3, Soph ShufHe 2, Spring Spree 3, Class President 4, Fiftieth Anniversary Celebra- tion 4. Pauline Mary MacDonald 29 Morgan Street Melrose Polly Business. Y.W.C.A. 2, Treas- urer 3, 4, Transfer Welcome Committee 3. Joyce Ann Maney 43 Washington Place Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Prince. Newman Club 1, 2, 3, Sock and Buskin Society 2, Vice- President 3, President 4, Com- pets 2, 3, 4, Spring Production 2, 3, 4, Soph Luncheon, Toast- mistress 2, Olde English Dinner 3, Soph Formal 2. Carolyn Joan McCann 1 Craigie Street Cambridge C acki e Preprofessional. ,Spring Spree 1, 2, 3, Invitation Day 1, 2, 3, Frosh Affairs Committee 1, 2, AA Sec1'etary 2, President 4, Class Representative 3, Class Executive Board 3, Palmer Memorial Committee 3, Junior Welcome Committee 3, Cur- riculum Committee 3, Daisy Chain 3, Butt Room Chairman 3, I.C.C'. 4, Field Day Chair- man 4. Maxine Helen Meltzer 1175 Boylston Street. Boston Preprofessional. Hillel 1, 2, 4, Legislative Committee of Forum 4. Ivy Isabelle MacDonald 510 Franklin Street' Cambridge Nursing. Jane P. MacGoldrick ll Hilldale Road S. Weymouth .laneball Nursing. Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Outing Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Treas- urer 2, Riding 2, Anne Strong 2. 3, 4, Chairman Soph-Frosh Valentine Party 2, Inter-class Swimming Meet 3, Softball 2, Tennis 2. Phyllis Arlene Mayer 49 Myrtle Avenue North Plainfield, N. J. Preprofessional. - Dorothy Elizabeth McComb 20 Washington Street Norwood Dottie Science. Glee Club 1, 2, Sec- retary-Treasurer 3, President 4, Ellen Richards Club 2, 3, 4, AA Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Stu- dent-Faculty Game 1, 2, 3, Base- ball 1, 2, Student-Faculty Game 2, MIC Technical Staff 4. Marguerite Mary Metz Fayetteville Road Fayetteville, N. Y. Mickie Science lP.T.l. Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Sock and Buskin So- ciety 1, 2, 3, Ellen Richards Club 2, 3, P.T. Club Secretary- Treasurer 4, News Circulation Editor 1, 2, Program Series Committee 3, Fire Captain 4, Invitation Day 2. Wlury Elizabeth Miller T TIIIIIIUUFIII4 Rumi Waban Home Economics. Y.W.C.A. 1. 2, 3. Publicity Chairman 4, Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4, Outing Club 3, Soph Luncheon 2, Student lnvitation Day 2, 32 Fund Drive 4, Spring Spree 2, 3. 4, Dorm Council 3, 4. Vivian Chi-Hua Moh 258 Wuynan Road Shanghai, China Home Economics. Transferred from Lasell Junior College 3, Home Economics Club 3, 4. Gloria Beroff Nathanson 35 Calwell Avenue Brighton Prince. Hillel 1, Prince Club 3, 4, Archery 1, Prince Fashion Show 3. Joan Carol Nelson 37 Mullen Street Tonawanda, N. Y. Svenska Library Science. Attended Uni- versity of Buffalo 2, 3, Dorm President 1, Dorm Board 1, Glee Club 1. Gladys Eileen Newhall Bennington, N. H. Nursing IV. Graduated from Nashua Memorial Hospital, Nashua, N. H. Basketball 2, 3, 4, Otlicial Referee 2. .ana .ax in X. Wu 1 I 'mf M22 Sr .f Myra Joyce lVlillt-r 138-36 227111 Street Laurellon, N. Y. Business. Hillel. Nancy Anne Moore 14 Kingslfznd Terrace Burlington, Vt. Nursing. l.V.C.F. 1, Treasurer 2, Outing Club 1, 2, 3, Anne Strong 2, President 3, Christian Association 3, Junior Welcome Committee 3. Barbara Eleanor Nelson 6 Thaxter Road Newtonville Nursing. 1.V.C F. 1, Missionary Secretary 2, Vice-President 3, Honor Board 3, Academy 3, 4, Anne Strong Club 2, 3, 4, Clee Club 1, Religious Club Council 3. Shaela Ann Netzel 205 Nesbitt Street East Plymouth, Pa. Library Science. O20 Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Volunteer Service 4, Sock and Buskin Society 4. Ann Marie Nilsson 530 Main Street Brockton Business. Outing Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 3, Junior Welcome Committee 3, MIC Circulation Manager 4, Valentine Party Committee 2, Invitation Day 2. iliiinlziiv Paula Carole Nissen 9 Longfellow Road Cambridge Jellybean Home Economics. Janet Dustin Norrby 9 Langdon Avenue Watertown Jan Business. Y.W.C.A. 2, 3, 4g News Circulation Staff 3, 49 MIC Business Staff 4, N.S.A. Food Fair 2. Sonya Nylund Evans Road Gwynedd Valley, Pa. Business. Modern Dance l, 2, 35 Junior Welcome Committee 33 All College Weekend 3, MIC Business Manager 4. Rose Barbara Oster 24 Oak Street Cambridge Science. Hillel 1, 2g Outing Club 35 Academy 3, 4. Marilyn Elizabeth Parker 728 Dorbett Place Plainfield, N. J. Prince. 'fi Ann Elizabeth Noon ll Haskell Avenue' Clinton Nursing. Outing Club Execu- tive Board l, Program Chairman 2, President 3g Anne Strong Club 2. 3. 4g Newman Club l, 2. 3. Jane Sally Nunes 146 Caffe Terrace New Haven, Conn. Business. Hillelg Sock and Buskin lg House Chairman 35 Dorm Council 3, Campus Chair- man of Palmer Memorial 35 Social Relations Publicity Chair- man 4. Betty Ann Olsson 11 Warren Street Norwich, Conn. Bert Business. Transfer Welcome Committee 33 News Advertising Manager 3, 4, Social Relations Committee Executive Board 2, 3, 4. Helen Pappis, 433 Brookline Avenue Boston Prince. Orthodox Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary-Treasurer 33 Prince Club 3, 4, Frosh-Soph Valentine Party 23 MIC Circulation ,Staff 4. Helen Josie Parks 21 Merrill Street Hingham Business. Outing Club 3, Dorm Board 4g House Chairman 4: Secretary of Dorm Board 4. Dorothy Pnrritz 23 Ashford Road Newton Centre Little One Business. 'l'ransfer1'ed from Skidmore College 3g Forum 3: Sock and Buskin 3, 43 Dramalic Play Publicity Chairman 32 House Skit Night Chairman 3g MIC Publicity Staff 3: Compete- 33 Director of Freshman Play 4. Corinne A. Pasqualicchio 5804 Snyder Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Business. Bernice Adele Perlmutter 44 Pond Street Framingham Bunny Preprofessional. Hillel 1, 2, Sec- retary 3, Vice-President 4, Co- editor of Hillel News 23 Acad- emy 3, 4, Volunteer Service 4. Bulletin Board Chairman lg Cur- riculum Committee 1, 2, 3, 43 Sophomore Luncheon 29 Juni0T Prom 33 Religious Club Council 35 Treasurer, Student Jewish Appeal Drive 2, Class Execu- tive Board 4. Michele E. Philburn 164-17 15th Avenue Beechhurst, L. I., N. Y. Mickie Home Economics. Curriculum Committee lg Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4, Junior Welcome Committee 3g House Chairman 33 Fire Captain 4. Betsey Dean Pool 417 Liberty Street Rockland Home Economics. Sock and Buskin 1g Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, 3, Home Economics Club 2, 3, 45 Academy 4, Vice-President of Athletic Association 39 Basket- ball 1, 2, 3, 4g Soph Luncheon 2 3 Junior Welcome Committee 3, Olde English Dinner 3: Spring Spree 1, 2, 35 Baccalaure- ate 2, 3g Commencement 2, 3g Daisy Chain 3g Senior Luncheon 2, 3: Class Treasurer 2, 33 IG sistant Vice-President of Stu-G 4. 7- TEL X Barbara Joan Parshley 1710 Cunununweulfh Avenue Brighton Bobbie Preprofessional. Elizabeth Janet Peckham 18 Bay State Road Lynn Betty Prince. Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, 35 Prince Club 3, 4g Representative to So- cial Activities Committee 4. Marie-Therese Peverill 107 Phillips Street Wollaston Terry Nursing. Glee Club 1, 2, 33 Newman Club 1, 2, 33 Outing Club 33 Anne Strong 3g Mother- Daughter Banquet Committee of Newman Club 2g Junior Prom Committee 3. Marilyn Frances Pilsk Walnut Drive Nashville, Tenn. Prince. Hillel lg Prince Club 3, 43 House Social Chaimxan 1: Chairman of Junior Prom 3: Senior-Frosh Mixer Chairman 4. Margaret Lorigan Powers 25 Lee Street Salem Meg Prince. Modern Dance Club 1, 2, Newman Club Secretary 35 Prince Club Social Activities Chairman 4-g Honor Board Rep- resentative 1g Class Ring Chair- man 2g Social Activities Repre- sentative 3g Bookstore Commit- tee Chairman 4. Phyllis Ruth Powers 93 Prospect Slreel Northampton Ph yl Nursing. Anne Strong 2, 3. Cora Pucci 173 Andover Street Lawrence Cro Preprofessional. I.V.C.F. l. Janet Lee Quinn 11 Evelyn Road Waban .lan Publication. Transferred from University of Massachusetts 2. Sock and Buskin 2g French Club 2g Compets Hay Fever 2g Tennis 2g Christmas Formal 2g Sophomore Luncheon 2g News 35 MIC Literary Staff 35 Transfer Welcome Committee 3g Spring Spree 3g Junior Prom 3g UN Week 3g Forum Publicity 3. Lesley Evelyn Reid 37 Interlaken Avenue New Rochelle, N. Y. Les Business. Modern Dance 1, 2, 3, 4g Executive Board 1, 2, 33 Stu-G Council 3. Joan Claire Remppies 86 Boylston Street Chestnut Hill Nursing. Rhoda Lee Proman 92 Hazelton, Street Mattapan Prince. Archery lg Prince Club 3, 4-. Eleanor Quinn 75 Richfield Road Arlington Ellie Home Economics. Newman Club 1, Representative 2, Delegate 3, 43 Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4-3 Athletic Association Ping Pong Chairman 3, Vice-Presi- dent 4g Lunchroom Committee 3, 4-. Peggy Ann Raulinaitis 163 Walnut Street Brookline Home Economics. N.S.A. 13 New- man Club 1, 2, 3, 4-g Home Eco- nomics Club 2, 3, Tea Chair- man 4-g Spring Spree 2, 33 ,lun- ior Welcome Committee 3: Christmas Formal 4. Elenore Anita Reill 242 Crescent Street Rockland Ellie Prince. Glee Club lg I.V.C.F. 2, Outing Club 2, 3g Christian Association 35 Prince 3, 4-g Com- muter Representative to Stu-C lg Commuter Representative to Social Activities Committee 2g Class Vice-President 2g Sopho- more Luncheon 2g Class Presi- dent 3g Junior Prom Com- mittee 3g Chairman of Fresh- man Handhook 3g Junior Wel- come Committee 3g Commence- ment Committee 3. Eilene Gloria Resendes 80 Middle Road Acushnet Prince. Y.W.C.A. Social Chatr- man 3. Janet Ann Riordan I1 Cleuemont Avenue Allston ,lan Publication. Transferred from Northeastern University 25 Spring Spree 25 News 2, 3, 45 Transfer Welcome Committee 35 Class Executive Board 35 Y.W.C.A. 3, 45 MIC Literary Edi- tor 45 Curriculum Committee. Janet Bradford Robertson 560 Concord Avenue Belmont Jan Home Economics, Transferred from Middlebury College 25 Home Economics Club 2, 3, 45 Outing Club 2, 35 French Club 3g Honor Board 3, Chairman 4g Library Committee Chairman 3. Ellen Marie Robinson 1800 Randolph Street, N.E. Washington, D. C. Business. Curriculum Repre- sentative 15 N.S.A. 1, 25 Co- chairman Sophomore Prom 2: News 2. Nancy Sydney Rogal 77 Addington Road Brookline Library Science. 'Transferred from West Hill Junior College 35 Sock and Buskin 3, 45 020 Club 3, Publicity Chairman 4: Hillel 3, 45 Library Committee 45 Hillel Exec. Board 4. Mildred Ruth Rosenzweig 24 Fitzhenry Square Revere Millie Publication. Hillel 1, 25 Sock and Buskin 3. MUG' 11' Joan Rivierc 1504 Dobson Street Evanston, Ill. Home Economics. Transferred from Northwestern University 35 Spring Spree 35 Home Eco- nomics Club 3, 45 Mistress of Ceremonies Frosh-Junior ,lam- boree 35 Transfer Committee Chairman 45 Fund Drive 4. Janet Rohichaud 12 Ash Street Clinton Science tP.T.D. Dramatic Club 1, 2, Secretary 35 Outing Club 1, 25 Ellen Richards 25 Social Activity Dorm Chairman 2, 35 Campus Entertainment Night Chairman 35 Spring Spree Co- chairman 35 Hobo Party Chair- man 45 P.T. Club 4. Gloria Anne Rockhill 67 Wallace Street Malden Glory Preprofessional. Outing Club 1, 25 Circulation Stall' of News 15 Academy 3, 4, Co-chairman of Academy Banquet 45 National Folk Dance Association. Tobey Ann Rosenberg 42 Orchard Road Brighton Science. Hillel 1, 25 Ellen Richards 2, 4. Betty Ann Ryan 61 North Ash Street Brockton Prince. Newman Club 1, 2, 35 Prince Club 3, 45 Frosh-Soph Valentine Partyg MIC Staff 2. 1awAwu U..w..m.fr zum-enum' xc-.c-.,g:.:. 1 act..-.:a1f4fh-xr. f--'-miter.:-name:-: Patricia Ann Ryder I8 Byron Street WakeHeld Pat Nursing. Newman Club 2, 3g Anne Strong 2, 3, 43 Y.W.C.A. 23 Junior Welcome Committee3 Bib Party Committee 3g Junior Prom Committee 3. Ann Bernice Schaefer 31 Hawthorne Avenue Arlington Nursing. Newman Club 1, 2, 33 Outing Club 2, 3g Y.W.C.A. 1, 23 Anne Strong 2, 3, 43 Junior Welcome Committee 33 Cur- riculum Committee. Marie Colette Schumb 27 Carden Street Milton Re-Re Library Science. Newman Club 1, 2, 3, 43 O20 Club 2, 3, Vice- President 43 Sock and Buskin 43 Volunteer Service 43 Junior Prom 33 Daisy Chain 3. Janet Keith Smith 14 Glendale Avenue Peabody Nursing. Mary-Louise Sperry 79 Paxton Street Leicester Mary Lou Home Economics. Transferred from University of Connecticut 4g Home Economics Club 4. Maria Alice Santos -19 Katharine Street New Bedford Preprofessional. Glee Club 1, 2g Modern Dance Club 43 Newman Club lg Outing Club 2, 3, 4-3 Social Relations 3, 43 Song Chairman, May Day 23 Vol- unteer Service 3, 4. Carole Starr Schein flVIrsJ 14 Norton Road Quincy Kelly I Prince. Transferred from Colby College 3g Prince Club 3, 43 Transfer Welcome Committee 4. Nancy Hope Shevers 75 Huntington Avenue Scarsdale, N. Y. Publication.. Clee Club 1, 23 News lg MIC 4g Sock and Bus- kin lg Review 43 Bib Party 33 Frosh-Soph Mixer 43 Junior Prom 3. Susan Frances Snell 296 Russett Road Chestnut Hill Sue Business. Hillel 1, 2, 3, 43 Out- ing Club 1, 23 Class Day Usher 13 College Events Rep- resentative 13 Prom Committee 1, 2g Sophomore Valentine Party 23 Student Invitation Day Usher 2, 3. Carol Joan Spiegel 212 So. Orange Avenue So. Orange, N, J. Miki Prince. Hillel 1, 2, 3g Prince Club 3, 43 Junior Prom Com- mittee 33 Junior Welcome Com- mittee 3g Senior-Frosh Mixer 4. Sarah Ruth Stacy 4213 Carden Street Western Springs, Ill. Sally Library Science. Elaine Shelnitz Stein flVlrs.J 9 Leona Avenue Hamden, Conn. Library Science. Tl73I'lSfE'I'1'CCl from University of Connecticut 23 Transfer Welcome Commit- tee 3: Academy 3, 4-, Club Exec. Board 3g O20 Club 4. Mary Ellen Storck Williamsburg, Va. Molly Home Economics. French Club lg Sock and Buskin Society 2: Outing Club 1, 23 Home Eco- nomics Club 2, 3, 4-g Volunteer Service. Elizabeth Taber 53 Fairfield Avenue Holyoke Betsy V Publication. Transferred from Middlebury College 4. Barbara Grant Tatlan 71 Chester Street Worcester Barb Prince. Newman Club 1, 2, 3: Sock and Buskin Society 1, 3. 4-g Prince Club 3, 4, Prom Com- mittees 1, 2, 35 Spring Spree 3g Frosll-Junior Jamboree 3. Nancy Stebbins Bedford, N. H. Stebbie Nursing. Anne Strong 3, 4-5 Co- chairman of Freshman Prom. Sandra J. Sternberg CMrs.J 50 Irving Street Cambridge Sandy Home Economics. Transferred from University of Missouri 23 Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4-. Muriel Mary Sweeney 825 Princeton. Boulevard Lowell Home Economics. Transferred from Regis College 25 Newman Club 2, 3, 4g Home Economics Club 2, 3, 4-g News 2, Jeanine Charlotte Tarrant 221 Main Street Roslyn, L. I., N. Y. Publication. Transferred from Beaner College 3. Joanna Margarida Tavares 224 Highland Avenue Somerville Nursing. Newman Club 15 Anne Strong 2, 3g Y.W.C.A. 3. Marie Tavla 78 Bennett Street Brighton Science. Orthodox Club 1, 2, 3, Exec. Board 4, Ellen Rich- ards 2, 3, 4-Q Spring Spree 1, 2. 3g Junior Transfer Committee 3, MIC Technical Staff 4g Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration. Adrina Joyce Times Frost Road Tyngsboro Science. Ellen Richards 2, 3, 45 Christian Association, Outing Clubg Spring, Spree, Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration. Marcia Jean Tobin 137 Neponset Street Norwood Soapy Science. Clee Club 1, 2, 3, 4g Ellen Richards 2, 3, Sec.-Treas. 4, Academy 3, 4. Nancy Elizabeth Tucker 64 Fullerton Avenue Whitman Home Economics. Sock and Buskin Society 1, Home Eco- nomics Club 2, 3, 4, Academy 45 House Chairman 3, Fund Drive 3. Margaret Van Note 36 Rockledge Road Newton Highlands Peggy Nursing. Anne Strong 2, 3, 4, Outing Club 1, 2, 34 Y.W.C.A. 1, 2g lnterclass Athletics 1, 2, 3: Swimming Meet 1, 2, 3g Soph Luncheon 2. X ss we 'i Street. t, . Theresa M. Tenereillo 30 Sheafe Street Boston Cunnin. Preprofessional. Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, 3, 4: Sock and Buskin Society 2, Newman Club 2, 4, Social Relations 4g Spring Spree Foorl and Layout Committees 1, 2, 3. Janet Clarissa Tisdale 374 Middle Street Braintree Ti: Business. Ann Torosian 664 Tremont Street Boston Business. Y.W.C.A. 1, 2, 3, Cabinet 45 French Club 2, 3, Riding Club 3g Glee Club 3, 4: Academy 3, 49 News Business Manager 3, 4, Mic Advertising Staff 4. Elizabeth Ann Tyrrell 120 Spruce Street Watertown Liz Science. Newman Club 2, 3, 4g Ellen Richards 2, Exec. Board 3, Pres.. 4-g Alumnae Scholarship Award 1: Ring Committee 23 Junior Welcome Committee 3, MIC Technical Editor 4. Patricia Gail Vinal 19609 Winslow Road Shaker Heights, Ohio Pat Nursing. Outing Club 1, 2, Publicity Chairman 3, I.V.C.F. 15 Christian Association 35 Glee Club 1, Librarian 2, Con- cert Manager 3g Anne Strong 2, 3, 44 House Chairman 13 Class Exec. Board 25 Curriculum Com- mittee 3. Aglain Hope Vontzalidcs ll Driscoll Street Peabody Science. Ellen Richards 2, 3, 4: Orthodox Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club Librarian 3, 4, Class Bas- ketball I, 2, 3g Commencement Choir 2, 3. Jane Watson East Street Topsfield Home Economics. Home Ecu- nomics Club 2, 3. 4. Katherine Nancy Wessell 31 Lincoln Avenue Orange Kay Home Economics. Home Eco- nomics Club 2, 3, 4. Joyce Barbara Wigor 1l50 Park Avenue New York, N. Y. Preprofessional. Sheila Lewis Wilmer Tall Spruce F arm Granville, N. Y. Science fP.T.l. Outing Club lg Ellen Richards 3g P.T. Club Pres. 43 Spring Spree 1, 2, 3g Student Invitation Days 2: Daisy Chain 3. Barbara Chapman Warren 14 Loomis Street Montpelier, Vt. Bobbie Science fP.T.l. l.V.C.F. lg Ellen Richards 2, 35 P.T. Club 4g Clee Club 1, 2, 3, Concert Manager 2g Christian Associa- tion Sec.-Treas. 3, Bluettes 3, 4: Academy 3, President 4. Phyllis Anne Weisenfeld 181 Concord Street Framingham Honey Preprofessional. Margery Keith Wight 74 Pleasant Street Newton Centre Margie Business. Y.W.C.A. l, 25 N.S.A. Food Fair 2, 33 Spring Spree, 1, 2: Soph Shuffle 2g Curriculum Committee 1, 2, 3. Faith June Wildes 2483 Washington Street Canton J une Publication. Transferred from Sweet Briar College 2g Riding Club 2, Pres. 3g News 2, Asso- ciate Managing Editor 3, 45 Chairman News Banquet 35 MIC Literary Staff 3, Literary Co- Editor 43 Class Exec. Board 4. Elizabeth Jane Wright 18 Allen Avenue Westfield Berry Business ' l mnsmvwaamwwmxmr:4cmuumqubAw.mgsu:Mea4:1nwff.uu.ut.famflvAuu1vwnuanuw mauvuu Ruth Joyce Wright Myrtle Street Millis Joyce Home Economics. French Club 1, Treas. 2, 3, 4-5 Home Eco- nomics Club 2, 3, 4-g Academy 3, 4. Rosalyn Zigman 67 Woolson. Street Mattapan Science. Hillel Exec. Board l. Program Chairman 2, Treas. 3, 4-g Ellen Richards 2, 3, 4-3 Acad- emy 4g Student Invitation Days 2, 3, Spring Spree 3, Curricu- lum Committee 3. 42 Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration 4, Mic Technical Staff 4. Mary Louise Coleman 290 Harrison Street Manchester, N. H. Mary Lou Preprofessional. . Christine Cumming 36 Webster Street Brookline Tena Nursing IV. Marion Ruth Deering 131 Pleasant Street Worcester Ruthie Nursing IV. Transferred from Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Hildegarde S. Doll CMrs.J Chicago, Ill. Curley Nursing IV. Transferred from Florida State University 4. Jean Velma Gorhan 14 Church Street St. lohnsbury, Vt. Library Science. Charlotte Paula Gruber 247 Harvard Street Dorchester Nursing Elizabeth Agnes Hannon 101 Plunkett Street Pittsfield Betty Home Economics. Transferred from Emmanuel College 29 Home Economics Club 2, 3, flg Outing Club 2, Newman Club 2, 3, 49 Student Invitation Days 2, 3. Willie Pauline Harris 6705 Kensington Avenue Richmond, Va. Billie Nursing IV. Barbara Elizabeth Johnson 204 North Road Lindamere, Vllilmington, Del. Johnny Prince. Transferred from Colby College 3, Prince Club 3, 4-g Senior Hobo Party Publicity Chairman. Julia Rose Zaffuto 15 Bastonia Avenue Brighton .lulie Publication. Sock and Buskin Society 2, 3g Newman Club 2, 35 Outing Club 4-g Volleyball lg Softball 1, 2. Carolyn Louise Zinn 7 Yale Street Winchester Cal Home Economics. Sock and Buskin 1, 29 Home Economics Club 2. 3, 4, Y.W.C.A. Tea Chairman 2, Pres. 33 Athletic Association 3, Class Representa- tive 4-g Modern Dance Club 1, 2g Sophomore Luncheon 23 Spring Spree 2g Junior Welcome Committee 3. Sally Marie Jordan 4 Leicester Road Belmont Prince. Eleanor Corinne Kirkwood Box 914 Gibson Road Hanover, N. H. Ellie Library Science. Cecelia Philip Logas Club Rudo Mt. Dora, Fla. Prince. Transferred from Coe College 3. Marguerite McDonnell Spring Road West Cheshire, Conn. Mae Nursing IV. Transferred from St. Francis Hospital Training School, Hartford 2. Margaret Poutre Quillen fMrs.J 249 'Collins Street Hartford, Conn. Nursing IV. Transferred from St. Francis Hospital School of Nursing, Hartford 2. Patricia Ann Quinby 213 Audubon Urine Snyder, N. Y. Pm Business. Transferred from Mid- dlebury College 3g House Chair- man 35 Senior Hobo Party 4.4 Academy 4-. Jacqueline Hirsh Shaps fMrs.J 65 Lanark Road Brookline Business. Hillel I, 2, 3 4-g N.S.A. 1, 2, 3, 43 Sock and Buskin 13 Anne Strong 23 Freshman, Sophomore and Junior Prom Committees. .aaguszumn-n .-Q m1.,L-.1qv.lmt..n'.- -. .... Mary Evelyn Sheehan 29 Crane 11111111116 Bl'0i'lil0Il El' Nursing. Transferred from Boa- lon College 4. Mary-Elizabeth Spicer Ox Ridge Lane Darien. Conn. Beth Nursing IV. Transferred from Lasell .lunior College 33 Acti- ing Resident Head, 14- Newell Road 3g Assistant in Lower Campus Clinic 3. Nancy Anna Sullivan 75 Hiflside Jiuenue Lawrence Nursing IV. Nancy Sutherland Culzver Military Academy Culver, Indiana Prince, Transferred from Indi- ana University 3, Prince Club 3, 4g Co-chairman of Senior Hobo Party 4. ,Iadwiga Mary Zwolska 43 Coleman Street Dorchester fndja Pre-professional. International In- stitute I, 2, 3, 4. Associate Editor Margaret Downey Business Manager Sonya Nylund Photography Editor Patricia Gannon Literary Stag M. Gene Carter Jean Griiiin Nancy Crerie Elizabeth Baldwin Rosemary Feck Toby Rosenberg Bessie Robinson Advertising Stag Barbara Baker Esther Baum Mary Jane Burrows Nancy Crerie Mildred Gallagher Barbara Gardner Vivian Lee Ann Torosian Business Advisor Miss Viola G. Engler Microcosm Board EDITOR PRISCILLA HALE Literary Editor Janet Riordan Circulation Manager Ann Marie Nilsson Technical Editor Elizabeth Tyrrell Assistant Literary Editor June Wildes Advertising Manager Mary Harrington Art Editor Jacqueline fKleinJ Fink Technical Stag Marie Fantony Barbara Caseau Marie Tavla Jean Faulkner Tina Calzolari Rosalyn Zigman Catherine Cakouros Circulation Stag Polly MacDonald Claire Bent Barbara Brady Mary Miller Dotty Halloran Muriel Sweeney Barbara Wood Helen Pappis Ann Noon Publicity Stag Mildred Rosenzw Nancy Shevers Literary Advisor Raymond F. Bosworth ei Mary-Hope Carini Marcia Tobin Juanita Jackson Catherine LeBlanc Dorothy McComb Marianne Cassie Nancy Reid Photography Stag Joan Carol Nelson Jane Hartwell Carolyn McCann Business Stag Barbara Kapp Janet Norrby Technical Advisor Dino G. Valz WEAR THE POPULAR WRIGHT 81 DITSON SADDLES Snlart two-tone style Oxfords with leather uppers. Plain toe. Rubber soles. The original Saddle shoes that stuart girls list as a must have the year round. WRIGHT 8 DITSON 462 Boylston Street, Boston 16, Mass. SIMMONS STANDARD RING A mark of achievement :luring college years . . . . an ever present reminder for alumnae. DIECES Sz CLUST 73 TREMONT STREET BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Longwood Pharmacy Bostonls Most Modern Drugstore Serving Lunches and Snacks 411 BROOKLINE AVENUE BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Nathan L. Ullian, Pharmacist and Chemist Daily sight-seeing to all historical points. Deluxe busses for local and inter-state charter work. W'hen in need of better service, call- THE GRAY AND RAWDING LINES Room 19 1 Sheraton Plaza Hotel BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS KE 6-2470 BARNABY, Inc. FLORISTS L0ngwood 7-5625 11 HARVARD STREET BROOKLINE, MASSACHUSETTS YUEH'S Drop by For Soda or a Snack Between Classes! Now, Wfe Have Fountain Service CAMPUS RESTAURANT 257 BROOKLINE AVENUE Pilgrim Road Store 24 Years at the Corner 253 BROOKLINE AVENUE BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Stacey 81 Vassallo Fruit Company, Inc. Wholesale Distributors Fresh Fruits and Vegetables 6 South Market Street at Faneuil Hall BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS LAfayette 3-4860 s: :ana 2 cz. . ' -nu,v,.uJu.:..:.u.f.u.L:.....J See the New WCHAMIW Today! f your dealer or any Unllerwooll office. Here's a lifetime of typing satis act UNDERWOOD CORPORATION 211 Congress Street, Boston 10, Massachusetts THE TYPEWRITER LEADER OF THE WORLD BOLTON-SMART ROBERT ROLLINS COMPANY, Inc. Specialists in Blazers Wholesale Purveyors of Choice Beef , Lwmb , Veal , Pork Honored to Serve Simmons College Fish Butter - Cheese CLASSES TEAMS SCHOOLS FROSTED FOODS 19-25 South Market Street BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Telephone: Lfifayette 3-1900 HONOR SOCIETIES, CLUBS SORORITIES, GLEE CLUBS and ALUMNI GROUPS 332 BROADWAY NEW YORK 3, NEW YORK 7 7 0312 CA. 7-03 1 1 0312 Swan, Newton Sr Co. Meats and Poultry Frozen Fruits and Vegetables Butter, Cheese and Eggs 2- 8 FANEUIL HALL MARKET BOSTON Famous for Coon Foons Q. DELICACIES PERFUMERY S. S. PIERCE CO. Store at 133 Brookline Avenue Miller Produce Co. FRUITS and VEGETABLES msrmavrons Snow-Crop Orange Juice and Frozen Fruits and Vegetables Lflfayelte 3-5600 TYLER Sr KEY W holesale and Retail Dealers in FRUITS and PRODUCE 33 FANEUIL HALL MARKET BOSTON 9, MASSACHUSETTS I The Bo-ton and Maine Rail- road is proud to be one of the vast network of privately owned taxpaying American railroads operating without subsidy - an outstanding , example of private enterprise working in a free democracy to perform a vital public service. v.5S'2wN 17? Mlfya. w l r v 'Airgas' muuvl hun In sq' FANEUIL HALL RICH. 2-0300 8 Compliments of a Friend :-1G:'v.::-:..'w. x.r:..,.f---:sn-.-..z,' J a.1r,a.'n:.f-sr'.:.x,7--L ',' THE AUSTIN CUMPANY ENGINEERS and BUILDERS 450 West First Avenue ROSELLE, NEW JERSEY i 1 f l l l F PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR MICROCOSM SARGENT sTUD1o, Inc. 154 Boylston Street Boston, Massachusetts ur.....mv.1. ma.-LW-.H .W THE HEF F ERNAN PRESS 150 Fremont Street Worcester, Massachusetts EASTERN ENGRAVERS, Inc 1250 Main Street Waltham, Massachusetts Telephone Waltham 0555 4 ... - -fa.: , z -, .-...-am...-,.-..,,.g,-.1,a.-.f:..,,,-.W lb J I wo WH '-' . i'- F' 01:4 Q ' -- -rt' J n' N. A year- book can be different things unto different people. It can be merely a record, or it can be a story alive with dreams and memories of the past. For a Mic Staff it is more than that. It is a task that begins in June with an idea in the mind and ends the following June with an idea between covers. A yearbook is, therefore, more than an idea or a dream. It,s a tangible fact. Here are some of the facts about Mic 1953. Paper - one hundred pound coated stock. Body type -- Bodoni Book set by linotype. Display type - Bernhardt Gothic Medium Italic. All copy was written, edited, and illustrated by the Stall. Three hundred copies were printed, bound, and dis- tributed in June. So the 1953 Micro- cosm is done. It is yours now. WY. Y- wr.. -f 1-swpmmta:--nn -mt N- . vw.:u4-mn-ran-r::u:u.mr.-ur -F-. -w fe- so eww -M -ee -as .tt 1- 1 ', 1 H. W . A I ,., . ,,. Qs 6- xva V, 5 . in W r , - M ' ' W W 5 .U ' ' -M U . I ' , 1 , 0 E 0 Y' F Nl' w. 1 , ' , fr ,v 'I ,I X ' ,,. 'v , ' 4 , H - M W , ' . ' -- 15 1 1 W 9 5 ' ' '1 - ' A un A 'wish 1 4 . J 4 .- 4 H. Q Civ rg. 4v,, 49, f- . ,Q- 2 Fab iv 0'-' :J x ,,1, , 1 4 X , , ' 1, . 1 4 lx., X ,, 'TQf ',w, , ' n 'k'l :I ff if I' 2 I ' ,' nl I .. , HY, w,.,fu. ,, ,V X , , ,M '.'1w'W J 'J ,,.v, M. 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